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VOLUME XLIII. COLUMBCTS, OHIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1852. NUMBER 14.1 lUcckln l)io State Journal IS PUBLISHED AT COLUMBUS EVKRY TUBSPAY MORNING, IT BCOTT & BA8C0M, J0OR1ML lUaOCTOB, Uliia AK PEARL iTKKm INTliMOl OH DIM. TEH HIS Invariably in mtvanet In Columbus, 92 .00 ytr ; by Qinil. 91 GO; clubs of four ud upwards, $1.26; of Unuid upward. l DO. TtlK DAILY JOURNAL In fttrnlshwl to city subscribers at $6.00, ml liv mull t frfi.OOs year. THK TK1-U i:KUI,V JOURNAL Ii 3.00 . year. RATES OF ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKLY JOURNAL n 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 (-,MOi0Meowa iH So So So So 8o f o :fe So 1 9 So S lwiuin, CO, 761 001 251 7M lio3 604 006 006 W8 00 SsqiiMns, 761 !irl To 2 '253 ttM 00& 0O0 008 0012. VmiiMfM, ,1 001 Ti.a 'i',3 GO 4 500 000 50B 00 11. U quart'., ll 22 &8 G04 O0C- 000 008 0010. 14. jl i(iinra, 4 column, Mi mluinu, 1 column, Moravia,) and in case no issue proceeds from thii union, he reserve, ihe right to place the crown on one of his illegitimate children, either one of those he has had by Mrs. Howard, or that he may have by some futuro more royal mill rest. He will demand this right of tho nation, and the people are in a good temper just now to give him anything he requires at their hands. It has been stated by some of the public journals that a reduction of 100.000 men in the army is to Jake place soon. But no official announcement to this effect has been mndo or even hinted at, and so far as I have been able to ascertain, no steps have been taken to put any such measure into operation. It would certainly be attended with danger to the government at the present mo mont, for with the present amount of political knowledge which the French people possess, no government can exist long which is not a $trong government.C)omc orrcponiicncc. Cleveland, November 10, 1852, Mr. Editor: Tho sun rises and goes down as usual, although Gun. Pierce is President elect, and the Whig pnrty defeated, not annihilated. I admire many of the qualities of Gen. Scott lie is brave, humane, patriotic ; and will leave a glorious record upon his country's history, lint if his defeat will put an end to military candidates and ull this military furor, that lias been rile in our country for a few years past, it may be well for the fmure of our country. I do out cluwuvubls monthly, f20 year ; weekly 24. rliiuiisviitilft quarterly ... 85. rhiuit-Hitilo (juitrtrrly 00. clnuml)le quarterly .. 100. 10 limn of this slwrt tyi I ickonwlasquiirfl. AdTs-rtlsement ordered on lb IiifMf pxriuslvely, douhle tba abore rutw. All lauded notlo cburicd duuble, and rnewuml u If wild. .foreign dorrcsponbcncc. Vortlifn Corrtrjxindcnee of the Ohio State Journal NOTES OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. .su w in. run. ixcunBu ..uu- ... . .,,, ,-,, , nm to , plracios Detected 1 no Formation of an Imperial . - , - r - - Guard-The Hereditary Succession Determined-So o1" ' "d 'oothinga of the Whig parly i and o it Keuuotion of tne Army. teems inui party nun. I hnpe Gen. Pierce will bo a model Trcaident; tliat 1.:. -j:: : :n , A ' In n uron i.&.n ... nllwla UllUl'I III. UU lul.l.l.rHllU.I UUI Vl.l.M.ry Will prSIOr, HI.U n. 1,3,1 iu ...u juoi . " - .. !...-.,. 1,. 1I,, r,, ...J ,i,, . oiling a .cue a. ..no car. desire to wil.io... A new i0 Whi(e o )n an,)tu0ror,he .-r .r .Mfu.i.i.uui. ....,.... .."'.. , ..., ........ .,,,, - 11 . H,AM ,l,m. , .,. t.i: .I.-. ':tj q.-..,. ..... u. f nlk . . ' ..... ... .. .... ... ... ... .- Mthfnl .rv." ronae. I no rundit conamiciea and cnsirucun in T1 nnnr. arn .,. ; mni.ns lln rni.:,,t rn- .iln t row,., are not ... nnnier.i... a. ... ine Lii.i.oa nmv. or PrMi,i,.Ilt elcct ouhi j ,pp,0i wi h0 p,nce j hi i.iigiuiiu, M ii j j j tne Onbinot. Tho friends of the Hon. Henry B. Payne, linn, anil r,n...ro .inmeii.o .nm. , proruro me r.gn i (if li( cj w,m nomint(,(1 , , fr of way ; .o tli.l Ihoy tl.rnw vt a.nnunt. ,,f .lock into Uoil(.d glM snM6 ,wo w,ntM, nRi)j m of 10 ' " I inn ihiit li would mnltn n vnrv pnml Altnninv fjnnnrl increased security felt in llio stability nf tho Guvern- ment of I. tun Nnpnleon, the Inrge anionnts of Govern ment storks which have horeioforo been dull side aro now in active dmnntid mi change, and thesi, added to the railrond stock, tlu fnreign limn stock, nod 'miscel- of Iho United Slates. Ho is a mm of flue talent, and untiring industry ; and if Ohio is to be represented in the Democratic Onhinol, no nmn of that pnrty is bolter qualified for any public rmplMynicnt llian Mr. Pay no. The lecture seusoti la upon us. Theodore Parker, ,a,,eu.,., ... , . .,or,.mu,,B , he Mrt,, recently delivered leolure before the "Young Men's Mercantile Library Aniochtion." It was a broad burlesque upon society in the " Merid ian of Doiton." It "brought down the house," and tickled very ninny. Mr, Parker is a man of books, , , b , ' . , . condemnation by the whole Christian world, found: pomessinc more stylo, more of that perfection .. ., , ., T , nqunl interent bo found ns in an hour's visit to the Bourne between one and two o'clock in tho dny, when the sieam is fairly up. "Tho limine and Tribunal of Commerce," of Paris, pofsefesuig more stylo, more ul that perlectn in nrrhiiecturo which pleases the oye, and a greater adaptation to the ptirpnses for which it is used, el- TI10 rails are ull laid on the L iko Shore Rosd, and the cars go through to-dny. This road links together nn tmmun.A i.,nhl, I...linn ......,! thoiiah not any larger than tho Merchants Exchange L, v , . . , , a . , 1 1 1 m 1 t j rrr New 'or,t' ew England, and the Southern Atlantic in New lurk, or iho II'ivmI Exchange in London. Tho , , 11,111 m . ' J n SlntfS. nml rm Innrr lint iron Imran urill tnmn tlinmlui-. ing from Mobile to the (Jueen City. Our course is 1 onttarrf, and if school-houses and school masters only - Ir-a- ui I . rniln.l. .11 ,il I . ... . ..u. . .r.un nun niu III n I. Ci f Wednesday. Where will he go next? and where will Messrs. Siono Hiul Wilt build anolher railroad 7 Thoy hall where tho mrchaniK and stock-brokers meet, is a pleiulid room, llifeet long by 70 wide. It has an ' rcmlo riinnitig all round, with committee rooms on tho nulnide of the arc-ule. high anhed ceiling. Tho room will contain 2,000 nor-ons. Tho pavement of tho hall is entirely of mar ' , . i i i i, i u .i i . are indeed railroad kings, and they deservn ereat credit near tho eastern end ol ihe hall, in winch iho heaviest . . ' . R","t-r,UK , .ii. . . ii .i . . ''ir the rapid nnd siihsinutial manner in which Ihov stock-brokers transact business Hero tho greatest , , , . . J maltm r .,,,. ... , i, n .:,no.-(i Tbiriv nr lmvo d"no l'IL',r wat' A" hundred miles of railroad r ,i. . ar., . ..r i,nm(..i i. fM..fnni.1t fr nrM ' nt a ,mn" j" ,'ie"o enterprising men. lego of entering this enclosure during busings hours, I J1'0 ,rav,fl ''.,rmifh ourcily ttt timo vry great. ,l,Pr .bev .L.n.l lnnni., nVnr tb rirrnlr milinr, AH ,h "nrhmes 'and Cl.rS Oil tho OnlumbtlS, OleVC ,hiM, i. r-rlm i.nni. f.-..t in An,u.r .rrpn,inn land m Cincinnati Road are put into requisition. t end. other for two hours like so many madmen, all "r c wonderfully the past season. !.., annii.il .ii.i ,.. ) mimr wiili xv.m .k....t. Some 5,000 have been added to our population, and and French gestkuh.tions. In ihe short two hours '"R0 n,im,'"r, ftf ,VPry fino bl"ineM l,!l,rkB 1,ovo Wp ,;iii,.. ,A mnnnv .i,,,. i,nll.l. l...ttvn im.n m..n l,ul "P- Dn dwelling houses without number. Rents bv means ..f about., c-sinre,. and litile slins of nrmcr. e,:arce hiB1"- IIl,M,,rM of kin,I &"V I f . 1- hi. ii .n uri.i .1 .1 Our butcher nrHj.nl oominntionip; iMiBinrss, ,1 i.h i.n, l.v IV.,.,- nnifnrml rUrW. J not be surprised if Clev land should become more of imr. Tb i(..ii..biilni.H tlm nnrii nr.. nm..n..i "P,,rk city " tlinii Cincinnati hss beon. It has many ,l,o hravir.t dealer, in ,bi. ddwvo company, a. """B -ver Hint ci.y. Freight on barrel., water though lly are nil member, or agent, of .li.ling.ii.hed " c"ml'"y "kl? hmnes. A few feet on tho ctHiide of theso nersons. ' b -- ( i I...r r,.ili., 1. ll.rnwti urno.wl tn nmlrnl llmm frnm "7 f tllB V M0 tl' C,),lie ft"m Kentucky, the pressure of tho rrowdrd hall, where trailing on a rrof- 8t- J0""' f,,rmerly n bec;mp .m11 rrtl nn nm,i,rnmi.lv. On .rnnnnt ' .ly J nnd this IS an acquisition of the - , r .. .it i rieht kind of capiial. He is a man of varied nnd proof tho peculiar conslruciron of tins room, the high , , 1 ,, , r. . , ... .i,t r , L-i, .. ,i.:. found learning au excellent teacher one of tho most arrhed ceiling, per Imps t'lality bet nigh, every wins- ,,, f . . ... n. r.lnr nn n lwi virv niA n lifillnw interesting of nil lecturers, ns many of your citizens will .....,- ,.,, ,ii .i,, remember, and n most pleasing companion. He is in l ni..i n .,1 n ib rr. . sense of the word a trim man. .t ....i i..- ' , l nn.l Av.rv I Yonr. truly. QUEVRDO. man is talking in a sc renin so as to bo heard over the din. Tliero are but two things to com p aro it to: the confused, H ibel-liko noino is well represented on a small scale by putting the ear In a beehive when ils inmates are actively engaged ; and the sceno itself as viewed from ih ' galleries, but for tho shiny hats, Political. JUDGE PAINE -THE LATE V. TORE SLAVE CASE. We have been surprised and vexed by the comment, of some portion, of tho prop, of the United, States, opon the late deciiion of Judgo Paine, in tho case of the .lave, of Mr. Lkmmon. Tho hi.tory of the case i. brief: Mr. Lkmmon went, with eight slaved, from Virginia to the cily of Now York, for the purpose f embarking for New Orleans nnd proceeding from thonce to Texas. While in New York the .laves were taken, by a writ of habeas corpus, before Judgo Painx, and after a bearing thoy woro set at liberty. That is the entire case. Tho questions to be considered, are : Was this decl. sion according to the law ol Now York ? and, Is thnt law in accordance Willi tho constitution of Iho united Stalest Wo have seon no statement from any responsible source that charges the decision as ill.'gnl. Let us look at tho subject for a moment. New York is n free State. The institution of Slavery was abolished there many years ago. Tho cnstitulion nf the Slate declnres that Slavery and involuntary servitude, ext-opt its a punishment for crime, should not exist therein. Every body admits that each Slate is independent in this 'cspect, and may or mny not prohibit Slavery, nt its own option. No other Slate hus a right to iiilerfrro m the least degree. The only exception to Ihis rule is that fugitive ttavtt, slaves escaping from servitude from slave to a free State, mutt its gn on ola.ui, to the master. Hut this only refers tu fugitive slaves. In no oilier event is there an ol.ligatiuii, express or implied, to recognize in any shape, tho existence of Slavery. When a black is claimed at a fugitive, tin. Slate law, ofc.nmo, gives wny to the constitution of Iho Unit, d States. With that single oxceptmn, it knows of no such insti tution as Slavery. If one man claims nnolher mnn as his store, in Now York, the only ground upon which ho tan, for a moment, ho protected in this claim, is that the slave is a rMnnipny, a fugitive. In every other pns. Bible cose the right is ignored. The courts caii.int consider It. The fundamental Inw declares that Sl very shall not exist in therttate, nnd there is noreuiedy hut lh.it all porsons who are no fugitive sln.ll bo declared free by tho courts. Wo hope this is itml.'rt,.,.il. A Stnte may quality tins freedom. It mny by legisla tion declare tiiat persons coming to reside fi,r n f.-w days, or weeks, shall bo protected in their slave prop erty. It may deelaro that persons traveling llirongli the State, with their slaves, shall be protected. It mny make these, and other exceptions. But, llnlil tho Leg islature dues moke these exceptions by express enact- mont, iho courts, in the abtcnee of taw, and wiih the constitution of the 8tato ns their guide mast decide, ns Judge Paine decided. They mi.it d.-cido that Slavery doos not, nnd cannot exist in New loik, ntul tliut tho only case where it can be recognized, is t lint offvgi-tivet. Theso principles am apparont, are everywhere recog. nized, and easily understood. Now, in the absence ol State law, recognizing tho right nfo Virginia slnve bolder to tnko hi. .lave, through New York, nnd, whil OFFICIAL ABSTRACT Of votel polled at the Vreiidential Eleelion held in ihe Slate of Ohio, November 2. 18.',3. Alio, the Official Abetraet of votrt polled for Prentlent in 1848. Ooiintiks. Fbesiiient in 1848.1 Przsidknt in 1852. Adams.... Allen .... Athlnnd .. Ashtabula. Athens Auglaize... lleltuont .. Ilrown.. . . Hutler Carroll ... Champaign Chirk Clermont . Clinton ... Oiillunbiniin Cnhfct',n.. Crawler.! .. Cuyahoga .. I ...ran . D.'finnce Delawuro Brie K'.irfield . Ftf ye. to. . Kraiikl.it. .. Kullnn .... finllia .... fi'.nuea ... (ireene .... Guernsey . Hamilton . Hancock.. Hiinlin ... Harrison .. Henry Hiuhlund . Hocking . . Holmes ... Huron . ... .la. kHon .. .Pi'll'-lcan.. Knox Lake Liwr.-uee. Li. king... I.o;:...i Lorain Luc;. Madison Mahoning .. Murio.i .... Me.lina Meigs Mercer .... Miami Monriie .... Montgom 'y Morean.... Morrow.... ! Muskingum Nr.l.lo ; Ottawa .... j I'allhliog.. . I Perrv I thore, hold them as .laves, it is perfectly evident tlmt I'ioknwny . . j this decision was tho only one thnt could ho made. I lo Is this Inw of New York in accordance with tho Con- ' - stitulion of tho United States? We answer yes, most plltnun clearly. Slavery is a local institution, u is a crenlmii rcinlilntict . ofew, and exists by virtue of express law. K.ieh Slate Ho may make, nrnnmako it, as it sees proper. When Iho imloy .. Union was formed, the Slate, where slavery did exist. ....... i-.. uu ...,.6... . ... - , NUelhy .. escaped to the froo States. This wnsgraiitcd. It was So.rk provided for by an expreu clause in the L.'nstiluii.iii ..t Iho United Stnte.. It wa. iweciiary lo have such R clause, ortbe master would have had no right to pursue hi. runaway slavo into a free State. Tho slave b dder knew this. All intelligent men know this. And they Summit Trumbull .. Tuscarawas Union Vim Wert.. Vtlltol... know, to-day, that this ctauso only authorizes them t. Warren . If they can claim others than fuuitives Washington j Wny.... ....j Willinms... Wood ..... Wyandot .. Total'.... l.r. ISK black emits and in. .u. ti.el.es, is well represented by a meeting ..f Fi.r.lowuers and Corkonians, discussing the Corrrspondenea ol the Ohio Piste Journsl. THE LATE SLAVE CASE. New York, Nov. Ill, IS.'.a. S'.me two thousand dollars have been .ubsciihed to. wnrds indemiiirying Mr. I.i:mM'.n for tho loss which be sustained by the relei.se of bis .laves. It i. proposed to raise for him live thousand dollar, in nil, which will ttiku fugitivet. I.v common I iniilt that the Constitution should contain lb" clnuno about fugitives! I. not Ihis conclusive thnt the right only extendi In runaway slaves ! It is then very clear that any Sinto law is con.titu-tionnl on this subject which does nut cuiflict with the constitutional provision oboot fugitives. Tho c .urts of all the States, as well ns those of the United Slutea, have uniformly recognized and net. d lip.-n this rule We venturo the assertion, that n decision, from a ro-snnnsible sonrce. cannot he found of Ml oiiposito chnr- acter. Wo como In the conclusion that Judge Paink ileci- .lr.l .rronlton tn nree.'.lent- aceoldilllf tl. tho law of 0,,r' fjw VnrV nod to the constitution of the Union. As Officer. ics, ho snid, he had no discretion. He did net make the law, but be nifminisrrrrd it. However great the ll ird-ship might have boon lo Mr. Lemhi.n, tho Judgo had no discretion but to do precisely os no . tut, tell llio lliS'l 1(170 5.'. 19 878 lr.mi lli:i8 28M 5f.r,7 :i.r.:iii IMJ 1.108 1:17 bs:i:i 112:! S78-.' 2 Hi 1078 2:lli8 ir. 507 1.W4 110!) 3-'i I fl'l.l 1081 1250 8.1(11 lntai I.101 iin.1 1(1.18 S!)7 2224 Mid: 2221' I7n!l 1 KIM 22111! 2!l!lllj 71.1. 71.1! :t mill II. 17 147:1 111)7 712 m.i:i 11:1:1 is:i.i 1014 Dill 182-..; 2.174 :ii:)n 2.i! 188ll 3:180. '8.1 1 1 21H2 lilfio till!)1 214!) 1.1 1 'I i;:ll HI 77 2;iim 1148 12(18 2:121: 1 12:1 lllll.l 181.1 IJI.1I 2.1.13 707 381 iniii 1030 3:lK(. .110 en: ltl.HI1 12.19 728 1341 1124 18411 157 2723 177 1 1 !).')!)! 14 1878 2.10(1 2204 1233 18.111 1814 11.12 177(1 1.1118 384 181111 141)1. 24311 11.17 31!)!) ililll 8721 2"3: 237.1 !I018 10111 1!)0 2; 27.1 24(17 320 14 1730, 1.13(1 2434. 1075' 1383 1480 .1431 2ti!14' 403, 24(10 .11)11 1.1(14, 217' 2114 8.111 1 11IB lll.llll 1)87 21 17 llllll 777 11(14 30ln 1(1.12 (117 !2(ts! l:i2fil "2(1 llllll Hid 1327 30ll 8.VI2I (1:1:1 3.1(11 232(1 llllll 4128 100 70 14S8! Jli:, 8131 381 34.11 330 208' 4041 73.1 8(1.1 137' 00 oil)!1 81 21. 5(18 08 1 1 42: I.V 284 ...I Di: ,373; 014 480 08(1 22 .1?, 543 I7! 341 23i : 870 .10 4.1.1 .130 !HI4 .13 .101 27.1 jOICj SO 1012 ,008 no: 11; 2721 3:111 301 311 407 127li J127 I 210(1; 202 20881 '331)1 1 1128' 11138 I.13(1 i lll.'i: 2382 1802 311! 3 1871 174 125 13' 4S:l 40, .170' 1(1.18 13(14 207.1 2(1(12 1030 22.1 2.12l'. 2(170 yjHi. 328 017 0.1 1 i 1(14 173 402 402 im. 1.14 20 40 3170 131.1 1087 1374 27iir,l 1003 80111 2018: 8100, 3.171' 1707' 806 1.101 1104 33ll 80.T 30.12' 727! 1103 004, 1400, 1R00' l343.il 1717 8I71 14021 .130' 2200, 1.1.18 2100 II1I0 11103 210!) 2002 0701 081' 3.",.;o'i 1 3d 1 1 1.111 127 1 0.11 1873 127o! 17.14 1300 811 2001 212' 3744 17118 1710 3.100 1487 4()0l 3 18 1 22401 2041 1020 20O7 II133I SOI)! 3831 2 'fir, 1010 1421 2800 13110 3034 1005 203o 21181; 013 7171 012 1010 2130 :ti j.ii 832 080 ! 120(1 121 0.18 1308 2171 17., I 58 27 ( 1711" 22 1 1.113 1004 2002 2213 1424 2237 18081 IO74: 2041 1710 .1.11 2083 158!) 2117 18-21 3408 .187 1.107 1147 2130! 1011 1)2, 107(1 882 17 38.1 10112 SOS 1001! 2812! 1001 100. 1871 llllll 1800 2770 2118 133' 1838 llllll 0.1 0141 1.170 1.173 .1110 27.14 007 308(1 2084 10:ln 4888 88: 274 121 Ml?! 217.1 027 1.1.11 2253 401 8133 3001 1004 1801 1072 1117 8710' 2330 10(18 211.10 1210 422 774 2823 2473 OOftA, 511 831 000 233 23 207 2502 301 24 454 303 122 242 200 183 401) 702 003 73 ,11! 2107 82 43 301 27.1 10 K.'O 242 71 13.1 148!) .100 504 084 35 74 422 14 281 21 42 803 10 343 020 1111 1.1 .182 101 1777 120 01 1031 70 1008 207 11 235 180 177 220 743 214 435 CAFTAISJHcLANE. It is astonishing what effect the success or defeat of a man has, upon the opinion which a Lo-oofoco will havo of him. The mn.t notable Instance of the kind of late, is that of Captain McLane of ihe nr ... . Ho is a Locofooo, son of a di.tinguiihed Loco. , , . Baltimore, and in full communion with that ' r,i'y. But, ho had put in circulation a .tory that Qui. Maokuder slapped Fbank Pierce in the faco, in a common gambling house in Mexico, just before Pierce left for home, and that he, Iho said Pierce, did not resent it, there, or afterward, a. a man of honor ought to havo done. Thi. .tory got out, and, down South, among Ihe fire eaters and lighting cocks, it wa. doing mischief to tho cause of the Locofoco candidate. It had good backing, McLane reiterated it, and finally got into a quarrel about it, for which he wu. court mar- lulled. We expressed our doubts about the truth ol ll, ut the time, and stated our conviction that it did not amount to tnu;h, even if true. During the trial of this Capt. McLane, bis lawyer is reported to have .aid that hi. client, the Captain, had become convinced that he had done Gen. Pierce groat injustice by hisstatement, and that ho wished the public to understand that bo withdrew all charges of any impropriety 0.1 ihe part of Franklin Pierce, &c. All this is very well. If he had slandered the General, he has done right to retract. But the country will remember that thi. trial, and this recantation, have corns tinee Gen. Pierce was elected President of the United States. It wss n small potato charge in the first place. B.it what will the public think of Cupt. McLane! Is ho not a model LoccfocoT WHAT DOES IT ME AH t Mr. EniTORl In the Statesman of Monday evening wo find Iho following paragraph about the priming l.u-siness of last session : " Wo hsro nrver received bat thirteen Ikoutnnd dollars for .11 the work wo .11,1. Thorn It st.oat etrnen thousand dollars due us, which uj If. this hour, wo lisve noser been ..bio lo n, t." Now. Mr. Editor, what does Ihis mean T Is it pos sible that the Sinto of Ohio is bsnkrn pt. nnd is not able to i.qv ils current expenses! At the last session, nn np.r.,priati(.n was made to puy for printing Why has ntor M.insen wrote out and read a resolution, which he did ( .ilVer, colling on tint Auditor lo report what 11.01.ev, and how much, had beet, embezzled T There is evi.l.-iitlY 0 screw lo.me, somewhere, can you give us any light on this topic T yours, ijiA-ifiir.il. Wo have heard a rumor that the publisher of llio Statesman hail minlo ltut bis occounl in such a fraudulent, olltriigeoil. maimer, that the Auditor of Sta'o has utterly refused to allow it. We hove also heard it rumored that, not ninny inonlhs since, tin. publisher of the Statesman wnttte.l a few llioiisnuds of dollars from the treasury, and that the Auditor told him, when hi. account wns presented and settled, if there was any thing duo him, it would be promptly paid. Wo have also heard it r.imorcd that there was terrible swearing, nhoiit that lime, in tho Auditor's olliee. The end of theso things is nnt yet. Senator Munoen's resolution did nof havo referenco to Ibis, or any other matter in tho Auditor's oflieo. I)ia Ccgislaturc. Monilny, November Stf, 15'1 IN SENATE. 10 o'clock, A. M. Mr. Moore, the efficient and popular Senator from tho Scioto district, appeared in his seat to-day. Mr. Wilson, from the com mil too on Finance, report ed a hill to mitke appropriations in part for tho years IH.t'i and tHoy ; whu Ii was read the tirst time. The bill to amend the act regulating the board of commieMiinera was read tuo second time and referred to Mr. Kwlgo, the bill to amend the tilili section ot the act to pro vide for the election of State and county oflicers wan nad the second time and referrrd to the committee of tho whole. The bill to fix tho rate of interest and to prevent niury was rend the fecund limo and referred to tho comuiht-o of the whole. The hill to reaulate iho Militia was read the third time and pnssed ; yeas 24, tniys 0. The bill to authorize suits to be brought against the State of Ohio was taken from the table and referred to Mr. Finck. On motion of Mr. Rice, the Somite then went into committee of the whole on iho bill to provide lor the suiiorvisioii, orii iiihI ion mm maintenance ol common schools, Mr. Oriiillebmipli in the the chair, and without nomina to anv cuncluiiim thereon, at half past 12 o'clock the coinmiiiee rose and reported pmgr--s-, and uu motion ul Mr. Uox, the donate toon a recess. 3 o'clock, P. M. The President liping absent, the Senate was culled to ordor by Mr. Wilson, and On motion of Mr. Munpon, the Sennto went into comtniUeii of the whole and resumed the consideration of the School Bill, Mr. Cradlobuugh iu the Clmir, and after somo time spent therein, the committee rose, ropnrifMi progress, ana amou leave io su agum. The Senate tlion adjourned. 17 nr. 10 12 H7 (U 209 17!) 8H S! US 3.rili (i(i0 I7:m ll!2 G !: 22-1 xvi I -in 11.0 21) ) the im'M;X,.V,r, lfi!C0 ir2Gl3l782 SCENE, in a ptihtic offirc in Columbm. Time A pleat-ant afternoon afttrtht Ehetiou in Novtmhtr. An Editor of a prominent I.ocofco paper in the Southern part of the State converting icitk a prominent ojHeer in the employ of tlx State: Editor. Well, wo have licked them, and Ohio bus a clnim upon tho new ndiniiiistriition fur a Cabinet o Al right slaves that they wero at llherly to go wliem they Ohio is entitled lo a reward. Editor. I hope Wm. At.i.rn will bo -olocted as iho man for the appointment. Oflierr.I don't. Allen is a d d micul and is not deserving of any thing at the hnnds of I'ikrck. Editor. Sir, I nmnpers.nal, ns well as poliltcnl -r ..i...i.. .i..t .:!. n;..t..... certainly ho stiiitneni to covor iout nieir vaiua. ine shilkh.hs, broken heads and bloody ns a iu ihe im- ,um ei womm u,l"'' " 7 llio Slate, mediate hnck-ground. It is a scene of legalized gam- K Mr. Unmn, at least, wilt have no L ( ()Uw ynrk nUm Jinh,0 bli,,T nn a onu.,1 sr,.lo. FnrmorW women were id- causo IO compinm inniier M Ills ireuimcni in our cuy, m tt.-i bv.-h to Inn rirc nl thn fr.vnrr.1 fnw 1 but I ' ,aw wnurr wu tn mw bi,b- r,D iuiDrn.ru ut.. i.... ...I i on,. ...ri. . p.i,1m.b ..iiii been in exisienco atiotit len yenrs, i his is the lust in gambling among the fair sex, that Government deemed wl,ic1'' in ft,1v,hnl ftn' nmpt h been rf w)ic ho it prudent to oxrludo then, fn.m Iho inner cirrlo. n"1'"" m riWy. It must 'vo been well . Women of small forlutiei, however, aro still found understood, iiavo homers, urniino urinugni slaves under the nrrndes, on ihe jiorticos, and under the irees lhat surround tho Bourne, speculttiing in stocks; and it is no uncommon circum.tauee to henr of a woman losing severil ilifiUMuud finues in a few hours. Last week a lady whose husbiiud was wnrlh about six thous md dtdlnrs, and who happened to bo the wenkiT into New York would result in mnking litem free, if ihi latter drircd tn return to tho bourn. Air. Lkmmon, own convictions, instead of asking advicn of others, he I . i r, i .i i :.. n v .. U....I. i. i i ini iu H ai.t.en, aim i no noi i m" in iie.ir nui.it 111111111,0 Oleasi'll. CtUCU IS llio Jiiw 111 w'w ii.ru. uu. 11 in, tint l ..... " " t .1- lau J- ni. N...-1. im ll.n Inw in ,,r BpiUieu n llim, free State, except where by pnMiive stnlnte.lhey have 0r.-Cn'l hripilj nil true Al.. slull never r '..... .1 .is.t nn n.KininltTWtiil frnin I'lL-nrr if ivn rim nrnveilt it. given Iho master Ihe right lo take bis slave, ll.nu.gt. , , .,. , - , did not expect to bo intuited. I rognrd your attacks upon Mr. Ai.i.kn ns a personal insult lo myself. Officer, They are nnt so intended, but ihe expression of opinion about At.i.hn h sincere, and will be matii' tained, hero and elsewhere. Editor. Good morning, sir. Ojfictr. (JiHid morning. Bxit F.ditor. It will he remembered tliat Col. Moroan said, in the nth of January Convention, that Ohio got no appoint menis from Pol., brennte, if any ono of her tons were recommended for place, nt least half a dozen others stood by, reidy to cnt hit throat, as soon ns he wns nam il. This was notoriously the caso, during iho admin- Psimc is no Aboliiiouist 110 higher law man Ho headed the list for tho relief of iho owner of tho slaves with a subscription of one hundred dollar. The has been on tho staluto books of Now York for many year. And yet inch paper a the W'athinpton Union call ibis tlecliion a "judicial outrage," perneirated upon the constitution and the slave holding Stairs of thn cm- accnruiUK 10 ins nwii uiii'iueui, 11 mi iiiibuiviiius huoiii , . , , , , ... , . the .afet, of. bo .tep which howa. about otako. while fcli-""ci" """"" ",M f"' . if .... . .., low.: yet in irgiu.a. i. no ..... nc. u .........ve.y upon .... Jr,. this .leei.i,,., I for it is hut the torch wherewith to light acain the istraiion of Polk. !y lh above, which we have good vessel of tb.. two. coned ell ).'.. money awnv from would most probably lmvo ...ken another way to pro- n,m0 f .oclional nailaiion. If this principle is to authority for saying transpired, In substance, ns related u:. 1... : 1.. . ...i.:..k ceed to Ten... nrev.il. Iho citizen, of tho dill'. rent Klules aro no in one f the nubliceflieeB in this citv.lt seems til it old slrong ... resist.) by r, prc.'eniing . him bow easily being so, 1. is really didicull to seo why the "I I TTMrTeVhttTu'ri tm'U lmv" 'litd '""' ,"" ,h"1 """ she could double and treble their Utile forlline nnd mun " J""B " "' """""" " " " '..u.,1,,- between Norh and 8,.,l,ihe i.enle '"c" ,ll"ur "I-'"1" w" J'"" " n",c" "" "'"J in ll.r lavs' si euUlin3 sho losl every cent. The surprise lenst ot all wny It .lioulU, some pretend , N y k j lh, ,,-, r Virainia ns aliens wore in days past. Tins .s a had state of ollnir.. Can I men who had got h. r money, when they beard the think, lead to any renewed agnation in reference to ,1 foreigner.. It were well if by somo mode Ihe mntlers be nrrniig. d so that Alien can get a place in plnred, mndo up a 1 slavery. I lie uec.sion ... u.o cuun, was nc.nat.y rrcjin-1 pntr.i.uc peoptr. ni now ...n cu,u ,n,,p". nio.r um , ,, uomcir It is disastrous 10 llio party in int. niaie red to be as it was, niile.s the law which had tho chief sem irnm ine ..,B..er-.aw ... ,r,..r r .. , , man, rmt m., vM. Allen, 8iul Me eircii.nstiitices In which she was plnred, mndo up sum snllicielit lo support Ihe couple until they could obtain employment Tho pulirenl new. of the week posie.se. somo im porlnlico. The intended visit of Ihe l'rosident tn Fen- taii.btea.l has boon revoked, nil account of the discov ory of hearing upon Ihe affair bad been wholly disregarded. "" .'" ""'J r" lu . ,,' , ... r" ' nsnr, Cel. Ton, O.iv. Woon, and Llenl. Oov. MsniLr., Some it.aintnin that tho law, a. it stand., i. linconstitu- ... t0 1. Huih. which needs u spur to iiromi.t are all before Iho Nation, having bon urged by their lionet, an.l tl.ero'.re 111.11 it mould not linvo had any hhn retires, of ll. erlevances. hut to the pioilh Iron, friends ns i.miicr persons lor a sent in . irncEsunti weight In.lelermiuin" the legal merits nflhe caso. But the intelligent and union! .viog rillEeiis of the North nnt, Thoy ennunt ull get there. Who shall slnnd bnek 1 ... .... .... i ... I'.... . . I .......Wa mnn ninrMlinn o. urn.... rol.l.Kf.. I . . . .. . n. .. ..I,,, of .oion,.iir.et..r uhul. I...1 1.. tlmnrre.t Hie eonsiiiuiionauiy in uio inw i. nuistinci ouosuon, " - -, r . . ' i iiis is now ids great quesiion in timo. r.irnos are and l,pii..,..,e.,t of . number of citirens of that "u one which Judge I'll.! was not calle.1 upo., t.. ""l""''ivV"B.a,.rn..: of the cntiounnee of domestic ..... . - . . , ...i,.i,t.s Tim fiii.illi litis nn ran in lit iimnliiiii ll.nt 1 B . . forming on thin issue. Slemn is getting up. Lot outtiden look on. nnd laugh with those lhat win. WHIG DTTIY. pl.,co. It was snid tlmt nn infernal machiiio was dis- ensider. The Sjmth has no reason U complain that c0 Bli(, covend. nnd that there had been some conspiracy in ""X ""onl,,, r owauao w iian a mw 01 !hit , gft U )lot nmm ny.,y.vt to N tho army ( how far Ihee are true it Is d.Hicult to at. ' lniXiro Ui r '"n,P10 M j, , Aivft to 0hio and every mher fiee St .te rig.lis. . ..ro W ,ur ,. ... ...m.innc . nM.,t.d or , slaves into our State for any purpose. If tins were even " J I I I . . . ... e r . . .. I msmciB "i"-.. . --fx limes of ohmining correct information. Triumphal permit. nl, and were a Ui.og 01 ircqiioni occurrence, 11 h (l lhnir tertUiryt We repeat, il hisflrr7yi been reference to the futuro of the Whig parly arches had been built by Ihe loyal portion of the citi- wo,llu H'nu ,,,u", T. . ",,fi."1 held I.t courts, lhat the masior whe xens for hi recepiion. Tho journey to thn west and bes.des. It seems 10 me inereiore wen, lor ino main- QW lheTfib mkf ,lim frt.(li Hldl in Bfl n, Bll rnnnahlo men: north has also been countermanded officially, without "'"' harmony and peace tiiween ihe iNortti and I ) ( hw ff 8,Icli A Arm llw law from Ihe lirst. The Whigs, as a party, aro completely defeated A GRAVE QUESTION. A controversy of a novel character is going on in Loudon, llio great Urysiai fa men has been ru moved to Sydenham, near London, nnd the question is, wholher it sh.ill bo kept open for vbiters, on Sunday. The Clergy huve tiiken it up. The Archbishop and about ime hundred of the Clergy remonstrate agiinst it. A correspondent of tho Spirit of the Timet says, " ihoy reason that 011,01)0 of the coarte linen and futtian jacket population would report to the palace every Sun- uy, and desecrate the Sthbath by reveling in intoxi cation and profanity. The Timet, nnd other leading journals have taken Iho part of the working clnssos. ,d, iu many able leading articles, have shown thitilu palace, by being opened to the public on Sutuhiys, will act with n directly nopnuhu inllueiice to that held out by tho clergy, by not only giving recrenimn to the mm- lituilK, bill uy $mntn'tiim watmca ami mfuonlion in a lnrpe degree. The writer thinks the subject will go l'arliiimont, heforo it will be finally tell led. Thore are evidently Iwo sides to the question. D il, from our idea of ihe habits of tho " coarse linen " population of London, we should think their morals would, nof- sutfr by a little recreation, and a view of ihe crystal pah nee. If all such matters are shut up fmm ihem on the nly day when ihoy have lime to go abroad, they will, atid do spend them in the worst sort of disnip.it inn iu grog shops and brothels. The population of such ity as London Is a terribly degraded, corrupt man and wise, good men, may well diner in their ideas of hat is necessary to. lift them from their condition There is more in tins Controversy than appears on iti face, nt a first glanco. TBS END OF A TRAITOR. Wo havo had no confidence in tho political integrity of Toombs, Cijhonsn & Co., who have been betraying the Whigs nnd courting ihe Locolocos for some years pail. The following skcli.li of Thomas L. C i.i nomas it instructive, ns it shows the means he has lopted to get Into tho Semite nf the United Stales. Whigs would hardly take iu a man under such circunv stances, nnd give him office, but we mistake the politi cal character of the Locofoco, if the do not, at once, accept of him as ono entitled lo full communion. Read ihe following from the Botton Allan Ma. Ct.iROMi This gentleman, formerly a strong Whig, in the midst of llio lute Presidential election, enmo nut for Tierce and King. He has been hankering for several year for a seat in the United Stales Senate. The WIul'S preferred lo re-elect Mr. Hadcer. ihrec yenrs ago, and Mr. Clingman grew cold in his support of Whig principles. He next joined the Toombs and Stephens party, and in Hentemoer last, ne threw oti nil disguine, and tame out for I'icrco and King. He wns at this timo in Kileiah, The Legislature wa in sesdon. and a U- 8. Senator was to ho chmen. Soon nfter Clingman' letter, an article appeared in Ihe hV leigh lto.itnr,chsrginghim witu having promised Mr. tarr, a Wing memer 01 tun benisiuture irom UWff-man' dittrict, to transfer his friend in ihe district over to him, and send him to Cong reus, if Mr. Karr would exert himelf lo obtain f r him (Clingman) the Senator ship in Congress; or if lie did not wish lo go to Unn cress. .MT. Ullllltmao nun ureni imiueiirn in nmuiRH'n, nnd would procure him such office ns he desired. Ho n'so snid that hi did not mean to take Iho stump for Pit rce and King, ns neither ot idem had ever done any thing for him. When Ihe article no pen red in the Regis, ter, Clingman published a card, declaring thn statements " a tf u ot tnUehnoilH Horn beginning in etui. w nere noon Mr. Iliixlor, Sneaker of the House, rsme out and tier lured bimsnll llio milhor of ihe rhnrge and hn imnis- diatelv proceeded to imivo every ebrii ire lie had maile lie pulltheil a -laiemem, signed oy ,ir. r arr, suoinu. tinting every word ho bud snid, and alu two leiters from other members ol the Leirislattire, with whm Clingmnn hail simiUr converiaiii ns, nnd to whom he made similar promises. ...v r..n...n. bei Biven. M,nv i.irmi.,. rn .,., DO ciua irom i.i.r SOU, I.... .1,.. mn.t nr,.l..,ld U. th-ii hi. ..I.rliv l.nvlnr. The constitutional Wj of the law, which gave freedom reached a sullh h ut height to secure Ihe Empire with- lo Mr- iv". J is wil1 h teMwl in ,ho ...., seriousonnosition.il is not deemed iudirin... Supreme Court. To mo there Mums noihmg in it which Whw ( it thnt the "Union" thus Irnmples under foot 'he recent election, i uu is umpieSi onamy ami nn- Ii-.r 1... j;..!n rt;H-nti.ml.lnrv7 I'Timiaieiy irou. m uniui o j ... pmuu'iii uj u..v..e...Mft h j . Yltj. lliriy alidnld Im disbanded, as many persons is ii not aouufc nmn linn mo ikkii.ii .-' linvo supposed it wouM no, in consrquenco ol the In- ihese bickerings 1 We devoutly hoped that Ihe sub- umphiint election nf Krruiklin I'ierro, We do not coin HOUSE OF RRI'RBSENTATIVES. 10 o'clock, A. M. Prayer by Rev. Mr. Brunor. Yiionr M r. Houk. Of 0. B. Compton, respecting ! gas lifthts in Dayton. Mr. Some, of B. S'oror nnd others, for the admit tnneool'O. H. VosN-r to ihe bar. Bill Introduced. Sy Mr. Ward of Warren. To ro- pe;il an act tn regulate appeals lo Ihe district courts. eportoi mantling t.ominutee.Mr. noun, irom ine .lodicinry cotnmittoo, reported back the bill to provi.lo lor the nrfiinHil')ii of ihe LegiHlntiire, with ntneml- nieiits. Referred to enmmiltee ol tho whole. Committee of the Whole, Tho House then went into commit!, o of tho Whole, Mr. Houk iu tho chair, and considered tho bill to provide Iir the organization ol the Legislature, and after somo timo spent therein, mostly on the question whether tho House, when it lint meets, sliull Do railed to order uy a memuor or uy one of the executivo or judicial oflicers, the cotniniticn rose and obtained leave to sit ngain. The ttouiothen ainnurned. 3 o'clock, P. M. Tho hill to annoint Receivers incase of attachment. wns received bum tho Senate, correctly oneroised, and boiiiEr read once, a motion wns made to dm peine with the rules in order tn read il agntu ; and oinecuon oetng made, the yoas nnd nays were taken, and resulted yens 62, nays 15. I hoNneaKer decided thomolion to dispense, iosi, ns tho constitution requires a vote of " iliree-fourths of he House," to dispense with ihis rule. Mr. Houk appealed from iho decision of theSpenkor, on thn plea tlut tho " House" referred to inthecoinit luiion did not include all the members elected, but nlv those present at the lime. Mr.Wnrd.nl Warren, seconded the anneni. and uu- vocnted the sumo m-nning of ihe coumitution a Mr. Hi. ilk. Mr. LeBlond. Mr. Gest, and Mr. HiiKhe supported decision nf the boenker, on the ground that Homo " in the idirase unih-r cotisiderolion, included ull the meniber elected to the House. Mr. O'Ncil and .Mr. Shollabarger supported tho mo-u to apjiotd. Tli" question waslhen taken, nnd resulttd yen 42 nnys nr. No tuo decision ol the Npenkor wns snstnuiefi. Tho House then adjourned. back the bill relating to the sale of railroad bonds, with amendmeutsiirikingnutthe old bill and inserting a new one. Lnid on ihe table to be printed. Mr. Smith, of Stark, offered a resolution calling for the names of persons who had contracted for the print-inp, stitching and told ing of bills, under the law of last winter. Mr. LeBlond moved the referenco of the resolution to the committee on Printing. Lost. The resolution being on its passnge. Mr. Gest snid the contractor lived at Cleveland, and required the bills tn be sent lo him at the expense of the Stale. The Hnuse did nnt sn understand it. Committee of the Whole. The Hnuse then went into committee of tho Whole, on the bill providing for the organization of the House, and alter some time rose and reported it to the House with amendments, and the bill and pending amendments wero lnid on the (able to be printed. the House then adjourned. Wednesday, November 34, 159. IN SENATE. 10 o'clock, a. m. Prayer was offered by the Rev. Mr. Smith. Mr. Wilson, Irom Ihe committee on Finance, reported hack the bill to make appropriations iu part for the yenrs 1852 and 18.7.1, with curtnin amendments, which were agreed to, and the bill was read the third time and paused. Mr. Vnttier reported back the bill to establish a Bu reau of Statistics in the oHico of the Secretory nf State, wjihoiit amendment, and the bill was made ihe special order nf the dny for this dny. Mr. Midge, trnm a select commilleo, reponen uaca the bill to n mend thn act ustRblishitig hoards of County Commissioners, with an amendment tu strike out the whole bill and insert a new one. The amendment wns laid upon tho table nnd ordered to be printed. On motion of Mr. G'illett, the resolution nf Mr. Mun-gen relative to Ihe pressing and folding of Senate bills, wns taken from iho tahle. The original resolution wns stricken nnt, and on motion of Mr. (iilleit the following inserted : Retolved, Tlmt the standing committee on Printing ho find is hereby instructed In inquire into and report to the Senate at tho entliest rnuveotetit day, the cause t the demy in drying, presume, stitching and folding the bill ordered in ba printed, with the appropriate remedy, nnd thnt in the meantime, and until otherwise directed by the Semite, Iho Clerk cause ihe nece.ssary drying, stitching nnd il.ling to lie executed at price not excoeding ihe lowest rejected bid. On motinn nf Mr. Rice, the Senate then went into committee of iho whole on the bill for the re orgnniza-lion, supervision and maiuteiinuco of common schools, Mr. Cradlebnugh in the chair, nnd without coming to liny conehifii ui tho commilleo roso. The Prehident laid heforo llio .Senate a communication from tho Clerk in reply lo the resolution of Mr. Gdleit. adopted this morning, thnt he had contracted with Captain Lilley for tho performance of llio work iherein named. The Senate tlu-n took a recess. 3 o'clock, p. m. Mr. Tod moved ihe adoption ol a resolution, admitting M. H. Allan! t within the bar nf the Senate, as Reporter for iho Capital City Facts which was agreed lo. A ca'l nf the Senate was ordered ; and 16 Senators answered to their names, The Sergeant-at-Arms was despatched afier the ab sentees. A motion of Mr. Hibben, to go into committee of llio wlmlo, was lost. Mr. Mack oflerrd the following resolution: " Retolved. That the Finance committee of the Sen ate be instructed lo introduce a bill, having for its ob ject, ihe repeal of the two hundred dollnr exemption in toe present tax law. Also making it mo amy ui me Assessor to nppratso all property that thoy are requir ed to list for taxation." The resolution wns referred to the committee on Finance. The Senate then resolved itself into committee or the Whole, on ihe bill forthe better regulation of Common Schools Mr. Cradlclmiifih in iho clmir ; and after some time spent on the consideration thereof, the committee rose and reported progress. To-morrow iieiug the dny set apart lor public inanas-giving and prayer in the 8iate of Ohio, On motion of .Mr. W ilson, the Senate adjourned until Fridny morning at JO o'clock. to pul his lile any furiher at iho jeopardy nf the chan and that wo should heftr no moro of prebend bow any pnrty defeat can operate as an ex-.u... ;.. eral government. And it will certainly create much H w ...i. .ni,.r. tinciiisliment of pnriv liriiirioles. If we have over it for many years. Wo deprecate these seriiioiinl qnnr- eral government. And it will certainly surprise ll mo uiounai wi.n wm m ,. decision win . we , Uw of 0)O cminl wil mikt, common came in frowning down such sectional agita ling prints as Iho H'iiinfoa Uniim. Thr Tax Law UNivi:n.TY Lands. Our shot ol an assnssiu. The President ha commenced the formation of an " Imperial Guard," similar lo the celebrated Imperial Guard of Ihe Emperor. It is lo be composed nf fifteen hundred picked men, selected from the standing army of France. The qualifications will be site, personal appearance, nte, bravery, physical and mentnl ability. They will all be mounted on blooded horses, and caparisoned hi a style befitting Iho body guard nf the Emperor of a great nation. Their duty will he In guard bis prrsoh at all limes, in his palace, on parade days, and on (ho field of battle. Two nf tho oflicers of the Guard are already spoken nf: Napoleon B.itia- parte, son of ihe ex King Jem mo Bonaparte, and young Mural, son of (he Prince Moral, who lately dii-tinnuished hiumelf in ihe war acniust thn Knbvles in Africa. to Ohio, and by ihe underground Railroad, tn C a inula, urer lo prevent htm Irotn taking steps lo coiieci mesn Thn mnlter of the succession is said lo bo pnsitively So serious Is becoming the evil, thai the slaveholders taxes. It will be made perpetual, nnd tho Stnte win settled. In tho event of a foiluro of a direct male huve formed a Society for their assislance nnd protec- be compelled to lool the bill. Bo much lor wise legis lame from Louis Nupoleon, tho siiccesnion of the ex. I tion. The fallowing ate Ihe main features of tho plan: lation. King Jemmo. and alier him. of In son, Napoleon Ho. To Dave a pursuing committee, w act on mo msiruc- RrKATmMAT . Thn cWon for Sen. rest, shull declare the reverse of this In be Iho fact. We haVe had dull weather here for the last two or three days. The Cretetni City is shortly expected from I lavana. We have hud several telegraphic despatches, . .. . . 1. n i .... 1 in rrtcrenr. lo inn cnursa wniru u.o u,...n .illlmrllic. wU, tmmt w, ,, l,0fr intend io pursue, wnu uiv ci, uu nun mp, uui uiey are too contradictory in their nature, lo merit confi dence. We will know, however, soon, by the steam er's own report, how matters now stand between itself ami ihe captain-general of the island Yours truly, W. tinguishnient or parly pm-riples. H we have over hnd principles nod who enn dotibt tlu pure conservatism of (hose wo have advocated why should a single unit of our true pnriy strength consent lo mtrge itself into the OemocraeyT We lmvo no nnlinrtcn with such doctrines of willinc nhsorpiiun. Men mny ho beaten in bnitloi but thnt is no re I son why they slinuld enlist under tho bnnner of tho enemy. If tho wnr emitinm, nnd su;-h persons, instead orremiunit.g prisoners, are found with arms in law of last spring was under consideration, we d cussed Ihe propriety of taxing the Innds, the rani m ,,1(,ir lftM,iti WB nro inclined to think Ihey would very ,)ilh ! r.it tlm lintixlit ill l ie w n university m i ml v lin nnti ei io uio mnmi i irnnnra. . i... i- v.- v.....r. liiil-il If mor there was n lime when iho lovnl con- AtnehS. ll was uenninsirnieii j i"" ...i...r.r-, . i i 1 .i I.I.. u,l.lol.- ..ol.ll.hcl from sanrnt.vrs ,.f this conntry sh.mU ..nn.l lirm, In Ihoir ... .o,.,, ......... - - I nll.-R.nnrv to such line il.'Ctrlni'. a. luivo l.cfnox-m. his rn, thnt .nchtnxnti,.n wns clcntly.mjtist mm llio- ir, ,n , ,i,.iiii.lrnlinii i. l-roshlonl Fill "nl. But tho l.w pssit',1 ln.no..l nils, nn.i ino ins more, it is ll.,. hrrscnt. Iniornniinnnl q.icslu.n. nro wr. as.H.scd. Tho lessens lmvo npiipnli-it to u.o uni.ris, nl.oi.t nr... nil wi.irn wtu roiniro 1.10 suvuiy aim pr.i- ... . .. t...-i .i:i.. I .... .i... v... i .M...O..I .onio.i iho Tro.s. . cut ninnxLoinont nf iliBrrooi mon in all i.artics. A 1110 staves in ccmocKy .in u,ii , cu,,,, ,B . "'J-'-' "" r. . " . ".!. 11...V1.... wild ami I,, si.irit ..I .sorossion, rifo nm'.,B cnrlnin etn4fles. must be lield in ilierk. And with a view to tlm nininieiimice of otir ritditful intbiencn in surli a crisis, our organization should bo preserved with Iln uims!'""'0 nnd alacrity. 4 or Rj.nator Oovkt. For two or Ihree day Mr. Bkachman, the Whig member of tho House from Huniilton county, isounnf the umst sub-siantial, best looking men in the Hull. He Is a business mnn, and wo shall be much mistaken if he does not provo tn be one of tho most valuable members from the commercial emporium. Our Whig friends wen lucky in ihoir rhoice, and that 1600 mnjority Is strong evidence thnt Iho people were of the samo opinion. The Japan Expedition will leave about the first of December next. It is composed of tho following ships: Vetult. ( Vermont, 30(10 tons Missiaflippt, atenm frigate, 1700 Ions Susquehanna, do S.'iOO do IMneetoii, do 1200 do Allegheny, dn 1100 do Saratoga, sloop-of-wur, first class St. Mary a, do no Vtncennea, do do Razee frigate Mncodoman Brig-of-war Porpoise ,ri in. guns do do Tiiedy, November 3, 1859. IN SENATE. 10 o'clock, a. in. Pnwer bv Rev. Mr. Smith. Tho UUt mnking appropriations In pirt for Iho yeais 18r,'4 and IB"., wns read the second time and rccom mitted to tho standinii commilleo on Finance. The President laid beloro tho Senate the report m the Secretnry of Stale in reply to the resolution ol the sonaio in relation to the contractors tor ine ptinnc priming. 1 lie report wns laid upon uio tamo ami oruereu in be printed. Mr. Uillett ottered a resolution requiring inesnr-geant-at-arms to discharge two of the messenger hoys now employed. Mr. Wnlkup moved to lay the resolution on Hie table. The yens ami niv wero demanded, and resulted yens 12, nays 1.1. All the Whip voted nny. On motion nl nir. rmcR, uio resolution was ineu referred to ihe committee on Retrenchment. On motion nf Mr. Riddle, Mr. Peppnrd was elected to fill the vacancy In ihe Judiciary Committee occa sinned uylhedenlhol Mr. Uovey. On motion of Mr. Rice, the Senate Ihen went into committee of the Whole, and resumed the consideration of ihe bill for the heller regulation nl common schools, Mr. Cradlebnugh in ihe clrur. The commilleo soetit the forenoon in discussing ihe proper me'lvwl nnd extent of negro education whether negro rhiliiren simuui no permuted in nnrnn in cmn-mon the snrne school wilh tho whites whether they should have common school privileges at all whether, they should be taxed furscli Hil purposes nnd wholher they should linvo seimois c rem en exciupivny mr uieiie selves Messrs. Sherman, Pardee, Finrk, Rice, Cnshing, Pmmiird and Wilson, participated iu the discussion. Without com in it to nny conclusion, the committee at length arose, reported progress, and asked lenyo to sit again. The Senate then took a recess. 3 o'clock, p. Tho President lnid before Iho Senate a communica tion from ihe Statu Librannti. in answer to the resold tion of Mr. Peppnrd, in relation lo the volume ol Laws passed since IHId. i nn Commuincnimn wu. mm on inn mmn, On motion of Mr. Wn'kiip, the Senate then wentiatn Committee of ihe Whole, and resumed the considera tion of the hill for Uio re-nrgnnizatinn, supervision and mnintenntice of Common 8c lion is, Air. (Jradlebnugh In the Clmir. After sometime spent Iherein, the committee rose and reported progress, without having come lu any conclusion. House amendments to the hill tn authorize courts nl Common Pleas to appoint receiver in coses of attachment, were read, and On mnti..n of Mr. Finck, committed to the Commit-trooti Iho Judiciary. (In motion of Mr. Rira, ihe Rennte acain resolved ittelf into Committee of ilia Wholo nn ihe special or der of the dny the co"mnn schmd bill and before coming lo a resolution i hereon the committee rose. Mr. Mnngen (in earnest) nhVed tlm followingresolution: Reiolrtd, That tho Clerk of the Bena'o bo and he is hereby authorized to have the stllrhiog and pressing ot the Senate hill which nro now printed, rieruted for the time being, until the committee nn Printing nh nil reMrt pursuuiii tn thn resolution in their uauiis, callinir on Ihem lor information on the iiiitject id stum-in it and pressing. On motion ol Mr. Kiddle, tho resolution wns mid on the tnhle. The Senate then adjourned. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. 10 o'clock, a m. Prnynrby Rev. Mr. Brmu-r. Petitiont . Mr. Hnrniim presented the memorial of C. W. Gray, nf Cleveland, respecting ihe pressing, stitching and folding of bills, awarded to him under the contract for State printing, nib' ring to release the same to theStntn, Referred in ihe Printing committee. Report t of teltct committees. Nr. Montgomery reported hack the bill regulating the fees of County Treasurers for ihe collection of school inxes, with amendments ; and the bill wos referred to the Judiciary com mittee. Orders of the day. Tho bill for the appointment of receivers ttt cases of aiturhment, wns received from the Sennte, wilh amendment, which were agreed lo yen 71, nnys o. So me toil becomes a law. The rending ol the mtulia bill occupied mucn ot me nnrning session. Alter which, tne Mouse toon a recess. .1 o'clock, P. M. Mr. Houk, from tho Judiciary Committee, reported buck iho bill amending the act providing for the compensation of llio owners of privnto properly taken for the use of corporations, without amendment, and recommended its pnMaie. After some discusninn, the hilt was committed tn the rmnmiltee ol the Whole. Committee of the Whvte Tito House ihen went into Committee of iio Whole and considered Ihe nbove hill, and rose and obtained leave in sit ngnio. the House then nrij-airned ull rriuny. HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION. RUNAWAY SLAVES. Storeship Souihamptnn, Ho Lexington Do Talbot Tulal number of men., impir.e, is rrcegnued. 1 he I resnlent, however, re- lion o 1 .a -reamem, to nave .census , ... o n n (tj ,ict( , ,Ul . -V ;; " fi Mt t(l htlWl Wl, serves tn l.imsell the right or auoplion, winch was owneil ly the memners! w nave a permanent inna i . , . f ir r,lv, Y. ridi.le( h.,n. enteriained lhat in tb. course of possesseil by the Kmper.ir Napoleon. This arrange-1 pay eipenses of pursuit , tn pay a stipulated reward ' in I,,, I...I.1 mi tho a month or six weeks he would bo able to tnko bis neat ment.lt will be at once perceived, ns fnr as reciuds I to llmso who capture; to allnw pursuit of no slave, ' ... ,. . . .... in tho Sennte, Ho wns hroucht home nn Monday evo Jenime BotiaPnrie, is only tn provide ncainst lite con- by ibetr committee, not owned by a membej tn pay 11,11 Uefmoer n V ' K niPi nilli Tuesday morning his leg, which had liecnme tlngenry of a sudden death, within perhaps a year or $J00 to a cilinen ol any tree Stale whit captures a m- - resn. . . . B .. . 1 J I ... . r it i urn. ... r... 1 . i- n I In ihe evenlna acute itillmimntton of the lnngsmnni two. Ho will no doom marry me frincesa u.mnine gitive, it over in year. ... ngei n um.fr, v . , , LoptHANA. 1 lie omcmi majority lor 1'iBurE fpi(lW(, . f , ,.(-(int injliry tn tie Hm,-was of Wasa, tn a few months, (who, It may bo monthmed, I iuformalion prnduclivo of a caplore, f iO. 1 iieso.wun nB Louinj t reported at 1.4S4. xlQ Cll)ie ni Dlt d-mh. His lungs have for some lime pwant. In anticipation of this event, last Bundsy I the recommendation of the adoption of Ihe special pa-1 I beea W(1,l( Bl,j it rKposuro after the accident, before renounced the Protestant faith, and was received with I trol law, on the border counties, constitute ihetr plan liORTR CAROLINA. I no omcttu liiujuruy iui he could he got nil irom tue wrecK. produced ine ai- rMt nornn Ink. th. Ctholie ehureh .1 Mnnveti. In V nf actlnn. " ' PllRCl inHorto Oawltna to (itW. twit which baa resultett in ueain. Marmt iar. , 3,04ij t tt. -I.,.- is.t-si nf thn shins' companh's nre to bo ml. led 700 mnrines, which. Willi the rompiemeni m m. stnresbips, ollicers. scientilie corp-, and dher attaehe.l in il.. n.n.himii uiill mnkn nn elfo livo force of 1lHK men and above RR0 guns, mostly henvy ordnance. Tho sirnmer are each to monnl a couple ol Patximn shell gun of the largest cntibre, and placed on revolving trucks, so as lo sweep ihe horinoti. Three con are intended to be used for the discharge nl shells of BH and 1211 lbs. each, and hmg ', making 1 gun to ench stenmor. r . , M..,h .t.;n i. nr..vt,l..d wilh two brass "4 lb. field pieces, to be used for shHs or canister shot. Philadelphia Ledger. Wo lmve rcceivptl ft copy of Oon, Carkyb i.. n,n nn,,.,!- nf Ohio in bohnHof a law to pre i...i il,n li.ui.ir t r. din nf the Stnte. nnd a defence of the leading features ohhe Maine liquor law. It is written with vigor and ability, and will do much to sustain 1hl 1 cause among the people. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. 10 o'clock, a. Prayor by Hey. Mr. Bruner. The bill In authorize courla of Common Pleas to ap point Receivers in cases nf attachment, being rend iho second time. The House then agreed lo suspend the rules; yets 78. nays v The hill Wns ibi-n rend third time. Mr. Wsrd, of Warren, moved the bill and amend meids be rnmrniited tn thn Jmliriitrv Onintil'ee, Mr. Houk opposed tho motion to cnmmit.and Mr. rVN..i.ltl,i,nnrf..,l Ik After snnie further discussion between Messrs. I Link and fTN.. ill- Mr. Plumb moved In have the bill printed, as ho could not vote underslandnigly on Ihe subject. i The motion lo print wa lost The bill anil amendmenis were then committed lo the .Indicnry Cnmmiltee. Mr. Dickey, Ropresenintive elect irom miner county, in the pliien of Mr Weller, resigned, appeared, wns qualified and look bis seat. The Ibmse Ihen imk n recess. o'clock, e. m. n.;;. WrvWi'. P.v Mr. Rekert. T.i remiUto the in i. .In nl' ihn deliver- of frt it'ht bv steamtmnls and oilier water crnli, and Ihn receiving ittereoi ny inn consignwo or owner- By Mr. Poland. To repeal an at l to serure tne enriy publication nf the Inw. Ity Mr. MetHnnnlinn, in mnpim nut mr nix in- cnrpornlinn of cities nnd inrnrpornted villages. Report of Standing Commthet yu. Wills, irom Hie Mmmiiioi. en Hnnds and IHjhwavs, yepnrtrd a bill tilling ihe mode id Inying out and Mtaiilishitig riair Mr. limik. from he Jiulic srv Unmmitiee, repnrien back the bill anthnriiing the appointment of receivei in cases of attachment, wilh amendmenis. wnirn were Tho following extrarts exhibit the vnrious nullifica tions of the Exemption Bill now in force iu ihe several States named : Maine. A lot of land, dwelling bouse and out build ings ibereon as shall not exce d five hundred dollars in value. Vermont, Tho homes tend of every bouse keeper, or a head of a family, lo the value ol live hundred dollars. Massachusetts. The (nt nnd buildings thereon occupied as a residence, In the value of live hundred dollars.New York Tho lot ar.d buildings 1 hereon occu pied as a residence, lo the value of one thousand dol lars. Maryland All real pstnle acquired by marriace, lurid b iho life of the wife, from execution of debt from bushand Georgia Twenty acres of Innd, including dwelling house nnd improvements, nut tu exceed two hundred dollars and ihe additionnl nmmmt of five, neres for each child umh r tiHecn years of nge. Honda. rorty ncros ol land in every farmer, and to every house keeper residing in a town w city, a house and lot not In exceed three hundred dollars in value. Alabama. Forty acres uf land when not In any town nr city, provided mien does not exceed in value four hundred dollars. Terns. -Two hundred acres of land, when not in any town nr city )n't, not In exceed in value two thou-sand dullnrs. Ohio. Every fnmily a homestead nnt exceeding five hundred dollars in value. Miehiiian. Forty neres, with dwelling house and nppnrteiirinees, when not hi town or city ; il in town nr city, a lot and dwelling house not to exceed in vnlue til'ieen hundred dnlhits. Illinois. Lot nf ground nnd buildings occupied thereon as a residence, not exceedine iu value one thnuaiul dollars. Iowa. rorty neres of land, not in town or city, or house and lot inn lowu or city, not exceeding five 'liiniired uoiiar. Witenllnin. Forty neres rf Innd. not in town nr citv. or a town and city I,,, nut exceeding one-fourth of an acre. California. The hnmestend consisiing of a quantity if land, toifeiher with the dwelling house thereon, and ils nppurteiinnces, and not exceeding iu value the sum of live thousand dollars. New Jersey. A homestead tn ench head of a family, being ihe family residence, to the value of five hundred dollars, lint tn bo neta in the hnnds of Iho administrator but to remain for iho benefit of the widow, and until the maturity of Ihe lust minor child. South Cnrnlitm A homestead of fifty acres of Innd, including llio dwelling house nnd appurtenances, not to extend In any property siiunlo within ihe limits of any cily orlown corporate. Thr LocnMoTiTR People who mny aoe a loromr- tive lentins up and down tho Innd at the rnie of forty miles an hour, making ihe earth tremble beneath its gisul trend, ami the heavens themselves reverberate with Us learlul clutter, senrmg nature with lis unearthly din, and tritditcning all creation nlniost from it pro priety people who only see it in lis terrible aciiviiy, lmve no idea what eminent social virtues it is rtidowrd with, This i its public chnrncler. Its private one is mio'lier aOtir, Now and Ihen, one of Iheso huge monsters, in whne imn bowel slumbers more than a thousand ginnt's power, comes up and stands under nur window, nmlstimko. awny n gently a Ihe most exem plary cooking stove t lis luiyo sientn pipes sing a strain us "ft nnd iluhet nthe most aminbte tcn-ketlle, and its Itnir.s nf steel breathing as nweeily ns an mlant in its slumbers. But the demon of power is there. Let nny mm hut pim h Im ears, and no venernble spinster cut will spit more fiercely ( let him gripe those Iron h ntnU, and Ihe pipes winch were 1 lined to so sou a train, send forth a yell ns if heaven and earth were mining tonelher; nnd those lungs which first hreaihed so quietly, cough like a volcnno ( and olV it Rites, darkening the h 'nvetis with Its volume nf smoke. Household Word. The now Kinking law of Wisconsin has been agreed!, ami no on y " J . ' , , mei,mnttM iw the neonla bv a msiorily of from twenty . bm-X;. tTp r- liVS. ' I-.-Hyjv. ujjd. jri,,.. o.. d w Mr. OM (tm th Judioi.ry oommittw, mportml cofoco h.rd rr.or.ojr homhuj. I - r - - ' '

VOLUME XLIII. COLUMBCTS, OHIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1852. NUMBER 14.1 lUcckln l)io State Journal IS PUBLISHED AT COLUMBUS EVKRY TUBSPAY MORNING, IT BCOTT & BA8C0M, J0OR1ML lUaOCTOB, Uliia AK PEARL iTKKm INTliMOl OH DIM. TEH HIS Invariably in mtvanet In Columbus, 92 .00 ytr ; by Qinil. 91 GO; clubs of four ud upwards, $1.26; of Unuid upward. l DO. TtlK DAILY JOURNAL In fttrnlshwl to city subscribers at $6.00, ml liv mull t frfi.OOs year. THK TK1-U i:KUI,V JOURNAL Ii 3.00 . year. RATES OF ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKLY JOURNAL n 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 (-,MOi0Meowa iH So So So So 8o f o :fe So 1 9 So S lwiuin, CO, 761 001 251 7M lio3 604 006 006 W8 00 SsqiiMns, 761 !irl To 2 '253 ttM 00& 0O0 008 0012. VmiiMfM, ,1 001 Ti.a 'i',3 GO 4 500 000 50B 00 11. U quart'., ll 22 &8 G04 O0C- 000 008 0010. 14. jl i(iinra, 4 column, Mi mluinu, 1 column, Moravia,) and in case no issue proceeds from thii union, he reserve, ihe right to place the crown on one of his illegitimate children, either one of those he has had by Mrs. Howard, or that he may have by some futuro more royal mill rest. He will demand this right of tho nation, and the people are in a good temper just now to give him anything he requires at their hands. It has been stated by some of the public journals that a reduction of 100.000 men in the army is to Jake place soon. But no official announcement to this effect has been mndo or even hinted at, and so far as I have been able to ascertain, no steps have been taken to put any such measure into operation. It would certainly be attended with danger to the government at the present mo mont, for with the present amount of political knowledge which the French people possess, no government can exist long which is not a $trong government.C)omc orrcponiicncc. Cleveland, November 10, 1852, Mr. Editor: Tho sun rises and goes down as usual, although Gun. Pierce is President elect, and the Whig pnrty defeated, not annihilated. I admire many of the qualities of Gen. Scott lie is brave, humane, patriotic ; and will leave a glorious record upon his country's history, lint if his defeat will put an end to military candidates and ull this military furor, that lias been rile in our country for a few years past, it may be well for the fmure of our country. I do out cluwuvubls monthly, f20 year ; weekly 24. rliiuiisviitilft quarterly ... 85. rhiuit-Hitilo (juitrtrrly 00. clnuml)le quarterly .. 100. 10 limn of this slwrt tyi I ickonwlasquiirfl. AdTs-rtlsement ordered on lb IiifMf pxriuslvely, douhle tba abore rutw. All lauded notlo cburicd duuble, and rnewuml u If wild. .foreign dorrcsponbcncc. Vortlifn Corrtrjxindcnee of the Ohio State Journal NOTES OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. .su w in. run. ixcunBu ..uu- ... . .,,, ,-,, , nm to , plracios Detected 1 no Formation of an Imperial . - , - r - - Guard-The Hereditary Succession Determined-So o1" ' "d 'oothinga of the Whig parly i and o it Keuuotion of tne Army. teems inui party nun. I hnpe Gen. Pierce will bo a model Trcaident; tliat 1.:. -j:: : :n , A ' In n uron i.&.n ... nllwla UllUl'I III. UU lul.l.l.rHllU.I UUI Vl.l.M.ry Will prSIOr, HI.U n. 1,3,1 iu ...u juoi . " - .. !...-.,. 1,. 1I,, r,, ...J ,i,, . oiling a .cue a. ..no car. desire to wil.io... A new i0 Whi(e o )n an,)tu0ror,he .-r .r .Mfu.i.i.uui. ....,.... .."'.. , ..., ........ .,,,, - 11 . H,AM ,l,m. , .,. t.i: .I.-. ':tj q.-..,. ..... u. f nlk . . ' ..... ... .. .... ... ... ... .- Mthfnl .rv." ronae. I no rundit conamiciea and cnsirucun in T1 nnnr. arn .,. ; mni.ns lln rni.:,,t rn- .iln t row,., are not ... nnnier.i... a. ... ine Lii.i.oa nmv. or PrMi,i,.Ilt elcct ouhi j ,pp,0i wi h0 p,nce j hi i.iigiuiiu, M ii j j j tne Onbinot. Tho friends of the Hon. Henry B. Payne, linn, anil r,n...ro .inmeii.o .nm. , proruro me r.gn i (if li( cj w,m nomint(,(1 , , fr of way ; .o tli.l Ihoy tl.rnw vt a.nnunt. ,,f .lock into Uoil(.d glM snM6 ,wo w,ntM, nRi)j m of 10 ' " I inn ihiit li would mnltn n vnrv pnml Altnninv fjnnnrl increased security felt in llio stability nf tho Guvern- ment of I. tun Nnpnleon, the Inrge anionnts of Govern ment storks which have horeioforo been dull side aro now in active dmnntid mi change, and thesi, added to the railrond stock, tlu fnreign limn stock, nod 'miscel- of Iho United Slates. Ho is a mm of flue talent, and untiring industry ; and if Ohio is to be represented in the Democratic Onhinol, no nmn of that pnrty is bolter qualified for any public rmplMynicnt llian Mr. Pay no. The lecture seusoti la upon us. Theodore Parker, ,a,,eu.,., ... , . .,or,.mu,,B , he Mrt,, recently delivered leolure before the "Young Men's Mercantile Library Aniochtion." It was a broad burlesque upon society in the " Merid ian of Doiton." It "brought down the house," and tickled very ninny. Mr, Parker is a man of books, , , b , ' . , . condemnation by the whole Christian world, found: pomessinc more stylo, more of that perfection .. ., , ., T , nqunl interent bo found ns in an hour's visit to the Bourne between one and two o'clock in tho dny, when the sieam is fairly up. "Tho limine and Tribunal of Commerce," of Paris, pofsefesuig more stylo, more ul that perlectn in nrrhiiecturo which pleases the oye, and a greater adaptation to the ptirpnses for which it is used, el- TI10 rails are ull laid on the L iko Shore Rosd, and the cars go through to-dny. This road links together nn tmmun.A i.,nhl, I...linn ......,! thoiiah not any larger than tho Merchants Exchange L, v , . . , , a . , 1 1 1 m 1 t j rrr New 'or,t' ew England, and the Southern Atlantic in New lurk, or iho II'ivmI Exchange in London. Tho , , 11,111 m . ' J n SlntfS. nml rm Innrr lint iron Imran urill tnmn tlinmlui-. ing from Mobile to the (Jueen City. Our course is 1 onttarrf, and if school-houses and school masters only - Ir-a- ui I . rniln.l. .11 ,il I . ... . ..u. . .r.un nun niu III n I. Ci f Wednesday. Where will he go next? and where will Messrs. Siono Hiul Wilt build anolher railroad 7 Thoy hall where tho mrchaniK and stock-brokers meet, is a pleiulid room, llifeet long by 70 wide. It has an ' rcmlo riinnitig all round, with committee rooms on tho nulnide of the arc-ule. high anhed ceiling. Tho room will contain 2,000 nor-ons. Tho pavement of tho hall is entirely of mar ' , . i i i i, i u .i i . are indeed railroad kings, and they deservn ereat credit near tho eastern end ol ihe hall, in winch iho heaviest . . ' . R","t-r,UK , .ii. . . ii .i . . ''ir the rapid nnd siihsinutial manner in which Ihov stock-brokers transact business Hero tho greatest , , , . . J maltm r .,,,. ... , i, n .:,no.-(i Tbiriv nr lmvo d"no l'IL',r wat' A" hundred miles of railroad r ,i. . ar., . ..r i,nm(..i i. fM..fnni.1t fr nrM ' nt a ,mn" j" ,'ie"o enterprising men. lego of entering this enclosure during busings hours, I J1'0 ,rav,fl ''.,rmifh ourcily ttt timo vry great. ,l,Pr .bev .L.n.l lnnni., nVnr tb rirrnlr milinr, AH ,h "nrhmes 'and Cl.rS Oil tho OnlumbtlS, OleVC ,hiM, i. r-rlm i.nni. f.-..t in An,u.r .rrpn,inn land m Cincinnati Road are put into requisition. t end. other for two hours like so many madmen, all "r c wonderfully the past season. !.., annii.il .ii.i ,.. ) mimr wiili xv.m .k....t. Some 5,000 have been added to our population, and and French gestkuh.tions. In ihe short two hours '"R0 n,im,'"r, ftf ,VPry fino bl"ineM l,!l,rkB 1,ovo Wp ,;iii,.. ,A mnnnv .i,,,. i,nll.l. l...ttvn im.n m..n l,ul "P- Dn dwelling houses without number. Rents bv means ..f about., c-sinre,. and litile slins of nrmcr. e,:arce hiB1"- IIl,M,,rM of kin,I &"V I f . 1- hi. ii .n uri.i .1 .1 Our butcher nrHj.nl oominntionip; iMiBinrss, ,1 i.h i.n, l.v IV.,.,- nnifnrml rUrW. J not be surprised if Clev land should become more of imr. Tb i(..ii..biilni.H tlm nnrii nr.. nm..n..i "P,,rk city " tlinii Cincinnati hss beon. It has many ,l,o hravir.t dealer, in ,bi. ddwvo company, a. """B -ver Hint ci.y. Freight on barrel., water though lly are nil member, or agent, of .li.ling.ii.hed " c"ml'"y "kl? hmnes. A few feet on tho ctHiide of theso nersons. ' b -- ( i I...r r,.ili., 1. ll.rnwti urno.wl tn nmlrnl llmm frnm "7 f tllB V M0 tl' C,),lie ft"m Kentucky, the pressure of tho rrowdrd hall, where trailing on a rrof- 8t- J0""' f,,rmerly n bec;mp .m11 rrtl nn nm,i,rnmi.lv. On .rnnnnt ' .ly J nnd this IS an acquisition of the - , r .. .it i rieht kind of capiial. He is a man of varied nnd proof tho peculiar conslruciron of tins room, the high , , 1 ,, , r. . , ... .i,t r , L-i, .. ,i.:. found learning au excellent teacher one of tho most arrhed ceiling, per Imps t'lality bet nigh, every wins- ,,, f . . ... n. r.lnr nn n lwi virv niA n lifillnw interesting of nil lecturers, ns many of your citizens will .....,- ,.,, ,ii .i,, remember, and n most pleasing companion. He is in l ni..i n .,1 n ib rr. . sense of the word a trim man. .t ....i i..- ' , l nn.l Av.rv I Yonr. truly. QUEVRDO. man is talking in a sc renin so as to bo heard over the din. Tliero are but two things to com p aro it to: the confused, H ibel-liko noino is well represented on a small scale by putting the ear In a beehive when ils inmates are actively engaged ; and the sceno itself as viewed from ih ' galleries, but for tho shiny hats, Political. JUDGE PAINE -THE LATE V. TORE SLAVE CASE. We have been surprised and vexed by the comment, of some portion, of tho prop, of the United, States, opon the late deciiion of Judgo Paine, in tho case of the .lave, of Mr. Lkmmon. Tho hi.tory of the case i. brief: Mr. Lkmmon went, with eight slaved, from Virginia to the cily of Now York, for the purpose f embarking for New Orleans nnd proceeding from thonce to Texas. While in New York the .laves were taken, by a writ of habeas corpus, before Judgo Painx, and after a bearing thoy woro set at liberty. That is the entire case. Tho questions to be considered, are : Was this decl. sion according to the law ol Now York ? and, Is thnt law in accordance Willi tho constitution of Iho united Stalest Wo have seon no statement from any responsible source that charges the decision as ill.'gnl. Let us look at tho subject for a moment. New York is n free State. The institution of Slavery was abolished there many years ago. Tho cnstitulion nf the Slate declnres that Slavery and involuntary servitude, ext-opt its a punishment for crime, should not exist therein. Every body admits that each Slate is independent in this 'cspect, and may or mny not prohibit Slavery, nt its own option. No other Slate hus a right to iiilerfrro m the least degree. The only exception to Ihis rule is that fugitive ttavtt, slaves escaping from servitude from slave to a free State, mutt its gn on ola.ui, to the master. Hut this only refers tu fugitive slaves. In no oilier event is there an ol.ligatiuii, express or implied, to recognize in any shape, tho existence of Slavery. When a black is claimed at a fugitive, tin. Slate law, ofc.nmo, gives wny to the constitution of Iho Unit, d States. With that single oxceptmn, it knows of no such insti tution as Slavery. If one man claims nnolher mnn as his store, in Now York, the only ground upon which ho tan, for a moment, ho protected in this claim, is that the slave is a rMnnipny, a fugitive. In every other pns. Bible cose the right is ignored. The courts caii.int consider It. The fundamental Inw declares that Sl very shall not exist in therttate, nnd there is noreuiedy hut lh.it all porsons who are no fugitive sln.ll bo declared free by tho courts. Wo hope this is itml.'rt,.,.il. A Stnte may quality tins freedom. It mny by legisla tion declare tiiat persons coming to reside fi,r n f.-w days, or weeks, shall bo protected in their slave prop erty. It may deelaro that persons traveling llirongli the State, with their slaves, shall be protected. It mny make these, and other exceptions. But, llnlil tho Leg islature dues moke these exceptions by express enact- mont, iho courts, in the abtcnee of taw, and wiih the constitution of the 8tato ns their guide mast decide, ns Judge Paine decided. They mi.it d.-cido that Slavery doos not, nnd cannot exist in New loik, ntul tliut tho only case where it can be recognized, is t lint offvgi-tivet. Theso principles am apparont, are everywhere recog. nized, and easily understood. Now, in the absence ol State law, recognizing tho right nfo Virginia slnve bolder to tnko hi. .lave, through New York, nnd, whil OFFICIAL ABSTRACT Of votel polled at the Vreiidential Eleelion held in ihe Slate of Ohio, November 2. 18.',3. Alio, the Official Abetraet of votrt polled for Prentlent in 1848. Ooiintiks. Fbesiiient in 1848.1 Przsidknt in 1852. Adams.... Allen .... Athlnnd .. Ashtabula. Athens Auglaize... lleltuont .. Ilrown.. . . Hutler Carroll ... Champaign Chirk Clermont . Clinton ... Oiillunbiniin Cnhfct',n.. Crawler.! .. Cuyahoga .. I ...ran . D.'finnce Delawuro Brie K'.irfield . Ftf ye. to. . Kraiikl.it. .. Kullnn .... finllia .... fi'.nuea ... (ireene .... Guernsey . Hamilton . Hancock.. Hiinlin ... Harrison .. Henry Hiuhlund . Hocking . . Holmes ... Huron . ... .la. kHon .. .Pi'll'-lcan.. Knox Lake Liwr.-uee. Li. king... I.o;:...i Lorain Luc;. Madison Mahoning .. Murio.i .... Me.lina Meigs Mercer .... Miami Monriie .... Montgom 'y Morean.... Morrow.... ! Muskingum Nr.l.lo ; Ottawa .... j I'allhliog.. . I Perrv I thore, hold them as .laves, it is perfectly evident tlmt I'ioknwny . . j this decision was tho only one thnt could ho made. I lo Is this Inw of New York in accordance with tho Con- ' - stitulion of tho United States? We answer yes, most plltnun clearly. Slavery is a local institution, u is a crenlmii rcinlilntict . ofew, and exists by virtue of express law. K.ieh Slate Ho may make, nrnnmako it, as it sees proper. When Iho imloy .. Union was formed, the Slate, where slavery did exist. ....... i-.. uu ...,.6... . ... - , NUelhy .. escaped to the froo States. This wnsgraiitcd. It was So.rk provided for by an expreu clause in the L.'nstiluii.iii ..t Iho United Stnte.. It wa. iweciiary lo have such R clause, ortbe master would have had no right to pursue hi. runaway slavo into a free State. Tho slave b dder knew this. All intelligent men know this. And they Summit Trumbull .. Tuscarawas Union Vim Wert.. Vtlltol... know, to-day, that this ctauso only authorizes them t. Warren . If they can claim others than fuuitives Washington j Wny.... ....j Willinms... Wood ..... Wyandot .. Total'.... l.r. ISK black emits and in. .u. ti.el.es, is well represented by a meeting ..f Fi.r.lowuers and Corkonians, discussing the Corrrspondenea ol the Ohio Piste Journsl. THE LATE SLAVE CASE. New York, Nov. Ill, IS.'.a. S'.me two thousand dollars have been .ubsciihed to. wnrds indemiiirying Mr. I.i:mM'.n for tho loss which be sustained by the relei.se of bis .laves. It i. proposed to raise for him live thousand dollar, in nil, which will ttiku fugitivet. I.v common I iniilt that the Constitution should contain lb" clnuno about fugitives! I. not Ihis conclusive thnt the right only extendi In runaway slaves ! It is then very clear that any Sinto law is con.titu-tionnl on this subject which does nut cuiflict with the constitutional provision oboot fugitives. Tho c .urts of all the States, as well ns those of the United Slutea, have uniformly recognized and net. d lip.-n this rule We venturo the assertion, that n decision, from a ro-snnnsible sonrce. cannot he found of Ml oiiposito chnr- acter. Wo como In the conclusion that Judge Paink ileci- .lr.l .rronlton tn nree.'.lent- aceoldilllf tl. tho law of 0,,r' fjw VnrV nod to the constitution of the Union. As Officer. ics, ho snid, he had no discretion. He did net make the law, but be nifminisrrrrd it. However great the ll ird-ship might have boon lo Mr. Lemhi.n, tho Judgo had no discretion but to do precisely os no . tut, tell llio lliS'l 1(170 5.'. 19 878 lr.mi lli:i8 28M 5f.r,7 :i.r.:iii IMJ 1.108 1:17 bs:i:i 112:! S78-.' 2 Hi 1078 2:lli8 ir. 507 1.W4 110!) 3-'i I fl'l.l 1081 1250 8.1(11 lntai I.101 iin.1 1(1.18 S!)7 2224 Mid: 2221' I7n!l 1 KIM 22111! 2!l!lllj 71.1. 71.1! :t mill II. 17 147:1 111)7 712 m.i:i 11:1:1 is:i.i 1014 Dill 182-..; 2.174 :ii:)n 2.i! 188ll 3:180. '8.1 1 1 21H2 lilfio till!)1 214!) 1.1 1 'I i;:ll HI 77 2;iim 1148 12(18 2:121: 1 12:1 lllll.l 181.1 IJI.1I 2.1.13 707 381 iniii 1030 3:lK(. .110 en: ltl.HI1 12.19 728 1341 1124 18411 157 2723 177 1 1 !).')!)! 14 1878 2.10(1 2204 1233 18.111 1814 11.12 177(1 1.1118 384 181111 141)1. 24311 11.17 31!)!) ililll 8721 2"3: 237.1 !I018 10111 1!)0 2; 27.1 24(17 320 14 1730, 1.13(1 2434. 1075' 1383 1480 .1431 2ti!14' 403, 24(10 .11)11 1.1(14, 217' 2114 8.111 1 11IB lll.llll 1)87 21 17 llllll 777 11(14 30ln 1(1.12 (117 !2(ts! l:i2fil "2(1 llllll Hid 1327 30ll 8.VI2I (1:1:1 3.1(11 232(1 llllll 4128 100 70 14S8! Jli:, 8131 381 34.11 330 208' 4041 73.1 8(1.1 137' 00 oil)!1 81 21. 5(18 08 1 1 42: I.V 284 ...I Di: ,373; 014 480 08(1 22 .1?, 543 I7! 341 23i : 870 .10 4.1.1 .130 !HI4 .13 .101 27.1 jOICj SO 1012 ,008 no: 11; 2721 3:111 301 311 407 127li J127 I 210(1; 202 20881 '331)1 1 1128' 11138 I.13(1 i lll.'i: 2382 1802 311! 3 1871 174 125 13' 4S:l 40, .170' 1(1.18 13(14 207.1 2(1(12 1030 22.1 2.12l'. 2(170 yjHi. 328 017 0.1 1 i 1(14 173 402 402 im. 1.14 20 40 3170 131.1 1087 1374 27iir,l 1003 80111 2018: 8100, 3.171' 1707' 806 1.101 1104 33ll 80.T 30.12' 727! 1103 004, 1400, 1R00' l343.il 1717 8I71 14021 .130' 2200, 1.1.18 2100 II1I0 11103 210!) 2002 0701 081' 3.",.;o'i 1 3d 1 1 1.111 127 1 0.11 1873 127o! 17.14 1300 811 2001 212' 3744 17118 1710 3.100 1487 4()0l 3 18 1 22401 2041 1020 20O7 II133I SOI)! 3831 2 'fir, 1010 1421 2800 13110 3034 1005 203o 21181; 013 7171 012 1010 2130 :ti j.ii 832 080 ! 120(1 121 0.18 1308 2171 17., I 58 27 ( 1711" 22 1 1.113 1004 2002 2213 1424 2237 18081 IO74: 2041 1710 .1.11 2083 158!) 2117 18-21 3408 .187 1.107 1147 2130! 1011 1)2, 107(1 882 17 38.1 10112 SOS 1001! 2812! 1001 100. 1871 llllll 1800 2770 2118 133' 1838 llllll 0.1 0141 1.170 1.173 .1110 27.14 007 308(1 2084 10:ln 4888 88: 274 121 Ml?! 217.1 027 1.1.11 2253 401 8133 3001 1004 1801 1072 1117 8710' 2330 10(18 211.10 1210 422 774 2823 2473 OOftA, 511 831 000 233 23 207 2502 301 24 454 303 122 242 200 183 401) 702 003 73 ,11! 2107 82 43 301 27.1 10 K.'O 242 71 13.1 148!) .100 504 084 35 74 422 14 281 21 42 803 10 343 020 1111 1.1 .182 101 1777 120 01 1031 70 1008 207 11 235 180 177 220 743 214 435 CAFTAISJHcLANE. It is astonishing what effect the success or defeat of a man has, upon the opinion which a Lo-oofoco will havo of him. The mn.t notable Instance of the kind of late, is that of Captain McLane of ihe nr ... . Ho is a Locofooo, son of a di.tinguiihed Loco. , , . Baltimore, and in full communion with that ' r,i'y. But, ho had put in circulation a .tory that Qui. Maokuder slapped Fbank Pierce in the faco, in a common gambling house in Mexico, just before Pierce left for home, and that he, Iho said Pierce, did not resent it, there, or afterward, a. a man of honor ought to havo done. Thi. .tory got out, and, down South, among Ihe fire eaters and lighting cocks, it wa. doing mischief to tho cause of the Locofoco candidate. It had good backing, McLane reiterated it, and finally got into a quarrel about it, for which he wu. court mar- lulled. We expressed our doubts about the truth ol ll, ut the time, and stated our conviction that it did not amount to tnu;h, even if true. During the trial of this Capt. McLane, bis lawyer is reported to have .aid that hi. client, the Captain, had become convinced that he had done Gen. Pierce groat injustice by hisstatement, and that ho wished the public to understand that bo withdrew all charges of any impropriety 0.1 ihe part of Franklin Pierce, &c. All this is very well. If he had slandered the General, he has done right to retract. But the country will remember that thi. trial, and this recantation, have corns tinee Gen. Pierce was elected President of the United States. It wss n small potato charge in the first place. B.it what will the public think of Cupt. McLane! Is ho not a model LoccfocoT WHAT DOES IT ME AH t Mr. EniTORl In the Statesman of Monday evening wo find Iho following paragraph about the priming l.u-siness of last session : " Wo hsro nrver received bat thirteen Ikoutnnd dollars for .11 the work wo .11,1. Thorn It st.oat etrnen thousand dollars due us, which uj If. this hour, wo lisve noser been ..bio lo n, t." Now. Mr. Editor, what does Ihis mean T Is it pos sible that the Sinto of Ohio is bsnkrn pt. nnd is not able to i.qv ils current expenses! At the last session, nn np.r.,priati(.n was made to puy for printing Why has ntor M.insen wrote out and read a resolution, which he did ( .ilVer, colling on tint Auditor lo report what 11.01.ev, and how much, had beet, embezzled T There is evi.l.-iitlY 0 screw lo.me, somewhere, can you give us any light on this topic T yours, ijiA-ifiir.il. Wo have heard a rumor that the publisher of llio Statesman hail minlo ltut bis occounl in such a fraudulent, olltriigeoil. maimer, that the Auditor of Sta'o has utterly refused to allow it. We hove also heard it rumored that, not ninny inonlhs since, tin. publisher of the Statesman wnttte.l a few llioiisnuds of dollars from the treasury, and that the Auditor told him, when hi. account wns presented and settled, if there was any thing duo him, it would be promptly paid. Wo have also heard it r.imorcd that there was terrible swearing, nhoiit that lime, in tho Auditor's olliee. The end of theso things is nnt yet. Senator Munoen's resolution did nof havo referenco to Ibis, or any other matter in tho Auditor's oflieo. I)ia Ccgislaturc. Monilny, November Stf, 15'1 IN SENATE. 10 o'clock, A. M. Mr. Moore, the efficient and popular Senator from tho Scioto district, appeared in his seat to-day. Mr. Wilson, from the com mil too on Finance, report ed a hill to mitke appropriations in part for tho years IH.t'i and tHoy ; whu Ii was read the tirst time. The bill to amend the act regulating the board of commieMiinera was read tuo second time and referred to Mr. Kwlgo, the bill to amend the tilili section ot the act to pro vide for the election of State and county oflicers wan nad the second time and referrrd to the committee of tho whole. The bill to fix tho rate of interest and to prevent niury was rend the fecund limo and referred to tho comuiht-o of the whole. The hill to reaulate iho Militia was read the third time and pnssed ; yeas 24, tniys 0. The bill to authorize suits to be brought against the State of Ohio was taken from the table and referred to Mr. Finck. On motion of Mr. Rice, the Somite then went into committee of the whole on iho bill to provide lor the suiiorvisioii, orii iiihI ion mm maintenance ol common schools, Mr. Oriiillebmipli in the the chair, and without nomina to anv cuncluiiim thereon, at half past 12 o'clock the coinmiiiee rose and reported pmgr--s-, and uu motion ul Mr. Uox, the donate toon a recess. 3 o'clock, P. M. The President liping absent, the Senate was culled to ordor by Mr. Wilson, and On motion of Mr. Munpon, the Sennto went into comtniUeii of the whole and resumed the consideration of the School Bill, Mr. Cradlobuugh iu the Clmir, and after somo time spent therein, the committee rose, ropnrifMi progress, ana amou leave io su agum. The Senate tlion adjourned. 17 nr. 10 12 H7 (U 209 17!) 8H S! US 3.rili (i(i0 I7:m ll!2 G !: 22-1 xvi I -in 11.0 21) ) the im'M;X,.V,r, lfi!C0 ir2Gl3l782 SCENE, in a ptihtic offirc in Columbm. Time A pleat-ant afternoon afttrtht Ehetiou in Novtmhtr. An Editor of a prominent I.ocofco paper in the Southern part of the State converting icitk a prominent ojHeer in the employ of tlx State: Editor. Well, wo have licked them, and Ohio bus a clnim upon tho new ndiniiiistriition fur a Cabinet o Al right slaves that they wero at llherly to go wliem they Ohio is entitled lo a reward. Editor. I hope Wm. At.i.rn will bo -olocted as iho man for the appointment. Oflierr.I don't. Allen is a d d micul and is not deserving of any thing at the hnnds of I'ikrck. Editor. Sir, I nmnpers.nal, ns well as poliltcnl -r ..i...i.. .i..t .:!. n;..t..... certainly ho stiiitneni to covor iout nieir vaiua. ine shilkh.hs, broken heads and bloody ns a iu ihe im- ,um ei womm u,l"'' " 7 llio Slate, mediate hnck-ground. It is a scene of legalized gam- K Mr. Unmn, at least, wilt have no L ( ()Uw ynrk nUm Jinh,0 bli,,T nn a onu.,1 sr,.lo. FnrmorW women were id- causo IO compinm inniier M Ills ireuimcni in our cuy, m tt.-i bv.-h to Inn rirc nl thn fr.vnrr.1 fnw 1 but I ' ,aw wnurr wu tn mw bi,b- r,D iuiDrn.ru ut.. i.... ...I i on,. ...ri. . p.i,1m.b ..iiii been in exisienco atiotit len yenrs, i his is the lust in gambling among the fair sex, that Government deemed wl,ic1'' in ft,1v,hnl ftn' nmpt h been rf w)ic ho it prudent to oxrludo then, fn.m Iho inner cirrlo. n"1'"" m riWy. It must 'vo been well . Women of small forlutiei, however, aro still found understood, iiavo homers, urniino urinugni slaves under the nrrndes, on ihe jiorticos, and under the irees lhat surround tho Bourne, speculttiing in stocks; and it is no uncommon circum.tauee to henr of a woman losing severil ilifiUMuud finues in a few hours. Last week a lady whose husbiiud was wnrlh about six thous md dtdlnrs, and who happened to bo the wenkiT into New York would result in mnking litem free, if ihi latter drircd tn return to tho bourn. Air. Lkmmon, own convictions, instead of asking advicn of others, he I . i r, i .i i :.. n v .. U....I. i. i i ini iu H ai.t.en, aim i no noi i m" in iie.ir nui.it 111111111,0 Oleasi'll. CtUCU IS llio Jiiw 111 w'w ii.ru. uu. 11 in, tint l ..... " " t .1- lau J- ni. N...-1. im ll.n Inw in ,,r BpiUieu n llim, free State, except where by pnMiive stnlnte.lhey have 0r.-Cn'l hripilj nil true Al.. slull never r '..... .1 .is.t nn n.KininltTWtiil frnin I'lL-nrr if ivn rim nrnveilt it. given Iho master Ihe right lo take bis slave, ll.nu.gt. , , .,. , - , did not expect to bo intuited. I rognrd your attacks upon Mr. Ai.i.kn ns a personal insult lo myself. Officer, They are nnt so intended, but ihe expression of opinion about At.i.hn h sincere, and will be matii' tained, hero and elsewhere. Editor. Good morning, sir. Ojfictr. (JiHid morning. Bxit F.ditor. It will he remembered tliat Col. Moroan said, in the nth of January Convention, that Ohio got no appoint menis from Pol., brennte, if any ono of her tons were recommended for place, nt least half a dozen others stood by, reidy to cnt hit throat, as soon ns he wns nam il. This was notoriously the caso, during iho admin- Psimc is no Aboliiiouist 110 higher law man Ho headed the list for tho relief of iho owner of tho slaves with a subscription of one hundred dollar. The has been on tho staluto books of Now York for many year. And yet inch paper a the W'athinpton Union call ibis tlecliion a "judicial outrage," perneirated upon the constitution and the slave holding Stairs of thn cm- accnruiUK 10 ins nwii uiii'iueui, 11 mi iiiibuiviiius huoiii , . , , , , ... , . the .afet, of. bo .tep which howa. about otako. while fcli-""ci" """"" ",M f"' . if .... . .., low.: yet in irgiu.a. i. no ..... nc. u .........ve.y upon .... Jr,. this .leei.i,,., I for it is hut the torch wherewith to light acain the istraiion of Polk. !y lh above, which we have good vessel of tb.. two. coned ell ).'.. money awnv from would most probably lmvo ...ken another way to pro- n,m0 f .oclional nailaiion. If this principle is to authority for saying transpired, In substance, ns related u:. 1... : 1.. . ...i.:..k ceed to Ten... nrev.il. Iho citizen, of tho dill'. rent Klules aro no in one f the nubliceflieeB in this citv.lt seems til it old slrong ... resist.) by r, prc.'eniing . him bow easily being so, 1. is really didicull to seo why the "I I TTMrTeVhttTu'ri tm'U lmv" 'litd '""' ,"" ,h"1 """ she could double and treble their Utile forlline nnd mun " J""B " "' """""" " " " '..u.,1,,- between Norh and 8,.,l,ihe i.enle '"c" ,ll"ur "I-'"1" w" J'"" " n",c" "" "'"J in ll.r lavs' si euUlin3 sho losl every cent. The surprise lenst ot all wny It .lioulU, some pretend , N y k j lh, ,,-, r Virainia ns aliens wore in days past. Tins .s a had state of ollnir.. Can I men who had got h. r money, when they beard the think, lead to any renewed agnation in reference to ,1 foreigner.. It were well if by somo mode Ihe mntlers be nrrniig. d so that Alien can get a place in plnred, mndo up a 1 slavery. I lie uec.sion ... u.o cuun, was nc.nat.y rrcjin-1 pntr.i.uc peoptr. ni now ...n cu,u ,n,,p". nio.r um , ,, uomcir It is disastrous 10 llio party in int. niaie red to be as it was, niile.s the law which had tho chief sem irnm ine ..,B..er-.aw ... ,r,..r r .. , , man, rmt m., vM. Allen, 8iul Me eircii.nstiitices In which she was plnred, mndo up sum snllicielit lo support Ihe couple until they could obtain employment Tho pulirenl new. of the week posie.se. somo im porlnlico. The intended visit of Ihe l'rosident tn Fen- taii.btea.l has boon revoked, nil account of the discov ory of hearing upon Ihe affair bad been wholly disregarded. "" .'" ""'J r" lu . ,,' , ... r" ' nsnr, Cel. Ton, O.iv. Woon, and Llenl. Oov. MsniLr., Some it.aintnin that tho law, a. it stand., i. linconstitu- ... t0 1. Huih. which needs u spur to iiromi.t are all before Iho Nation, having bon urged by their lionet, an.l tl.ero'.re 111.11 it mould not linvo had any hhn retires, of ll. erlevances. hut to the pioilh Iron, friends ns i.miicr persons lor a sent in . irncEsunti weight In.lelermiuin" the legal merits nflhe caso. But the intelligent and union! .viog rillEeiis of the North nnt, Thoy ennunt ull get there. Who shall slnnd bnek 1 ... .... .... i ... I'.... . . I .......Wa mnn ninrMlinn o. urn.... rol.l.Kf.. I . . . .. . n. .. ..I,,, of .oion,.iir.et..r uhul. I...1 1.. tlmnrre.t Hie eonsiiiuiionauiy in uio inw i. nuistinci ouosuon, " - -, r . . ' i iiis is now ids great quesiion in timo. r.irnos are and l,pii..,..,e.,t of . number of citirens of that "u one which Judge I'll.! was not calle.1 upo., t.. ""l""''ivV"B.a,.rn..: of the cntiounnee of domestic ..... . - . . , ...i,.i,t.s Tim fiii.illi litis nn ran in lit iimnliiiii ll.nt 1 B . . forming on thin issue. Slemn is getting up. Lot outtiden look on. nnd laugh with those lhat win. WHIG DTTIY. pl.,co. It was snid tlmt nn infernal machiiio was dis- ensider. The Sjmth has no reason U complain that c0 Bli(, covend. nnd that there had been some conspiracy in ""X ""onl,,, r owauao w iian a mw 01 !hit , gft U )lot nmm ny.,y.vt to N tho army ( how far Ihee are true it Is d.Hicult to at. ' lniXiro Ui r '"n,P10 M j, , Aivft to 0hio and every mher fiee St .te rig.lis. . ..ro W ,ur ,. ... ...m.innc . nM.,t.d or , slaves into our State for any purpose. If tins were even " J I I I . . . ... e r . . .. I msmciB "i"-.. . --fx limes of ohmining correct information. Triumphal permit. nl, and were a Ui.og 01 ircqiioni occurrence, 11 h (l lhnir tertUiryt We repeat, il hisflrr7yi been reference to the futuro of the Whig parly arches had been built by Ihe loyal portion of the citi- wo,llu H'nu ,,,u", T. . ",,fi."1 held I.t courts, lhat the masior whe xens for hi recepiion. Tho journey to thn west and bes.des. It seems 10 me inereiore wen, lor ino main- QW lheTfib mkf ,lim frt.(li Hldl in Bfl n, Bll rnnnahlo men: north has also been countermanded officially, without "'"' harmony and peace tiiween ihe iNortti and I ) ( hw ff 8,Icli A Arm llw law from Ihe lirst. The Whigs, as a party, aro completely defeated A GRAVE QUESTION. A controversy of a novel character is going on in Loudon, llio great Urysiai fa men has been ru moved to Sydenham, near London, nnd the question is, wholher it sh.ill bo kept open for vbiters, on Sunday. The Clergy huve tiiken it up. The Archbishop and about ime hundred of the Clergy remonstrate agiinst it. A correspondent of tho Spirit of the Timet says, " ihoy reason that 011,01)0 of the coarte linen and futtian jacket population would report to the palace every Sun- uy, and desecrate the Sthbath by reveling in intoxi cation and profanity. The Timet, nnd other leading journals have taken Iho part of the working clnssos. ,d, iu many able leading articles, have shown thitilu palace, by being opened to the public on Sutuhiys, will act with n directly nopnuhu inllueiice to that held out by tho clergy, by not only giving recrenimn to the mm- lituilK, bill uy $mntn'tiim watmca ami mfuonlion in a lnrpe degree. The writer thinks the subject will go l'arliiimont, heforo it will be finally tell led. Thore are evidently Iwo sides to the question. D il, from our idea of ihe habits of tho " coarse linen " population of London, we should think their morals would, nof- sutfr by a little recreation, and a view of ihe crystal pah nee. If all such matters are shut up fmm ihem on the nly day when ihoy have lime to go abroad, they will, atid do spend them in the worst sort of disnip.it inn iu grog shops and brothels. The population of such ity as London Is a terribly degraded, corrupt man and wise, good men, may well diner in their ideas of hat is necessary to. lift them from their condition There is more in tins Controversy than appears on iti face, nt a first glanco. TBS END OF A TRAITOR. Wo havo had no confidence in tho political integrity of Toombs, Cijhonsn & Co., who have been betraying the Whigs nnd courting ihe Locolocos for some years pail. The following skcli.li of Thomas L. C i.i nomas it instructive, ns it shows the means he has lopted to get Into tho Semite nf the United Stales. Whigs would hardly take iu a man under such circunv stances, nnd give him office, but we mistake the politi cal character of the Locofoco, if the do not, at once, accept of him as ono entitled lo full communion. Read ihe following from the Botton Allan Ma. Ct.iROMi This gentleman, formerly a strong Whig, in the midst of llio lute Presidential election, enmo nut for Tierce and King. He has been hankering for several year for a seat in the United Stales Senate. The WIul'S preferred lo re-elect Mr. Hadcer. ihrec yenrs ago, and Mr. Clingman grew cold in his support of Whig principles. He next joined the Toombs and Stephens party, and in Hentemoer last, ne threw oti nil disguine, and tame out for I'icrco and King. He wns at this timo in Kileiah, The Legislature wa in sesdon. and a U- 8. Senator was to ho chmen. Soon nfter Clingman' letter, an article appeared in Ihe hV leigh lto.itnr,chsrginghim witu having promised Mr. tarr, a Wing memer 01 tun benisiuture irom UWff-man' dittrict, to transfer his friend in ihe district over to him, and send him to Cong reus, if Mr. Karr would exert himelf lo obtain f r him (Clingman) the Senator ship in Congress; or if lie did not wish lo go to Unn cress. .MT. Ullllltmao nun ureni imiueiirn in nmuiRH'n, nnd would procure him such office ns he desired. Ho n'so snid that hi did not mean to take Iho stump for Pit rce and King, ns neither ot idem had ever done any thing for him. When Ihe article no pen red in the Regis, ter, Clingman published a card, declaring thn statements " a tf u ot tnUehnoilH Horn beginning in etui. w nere noon Mr. Iliixlor, Sneaker of the House, rsme out and tier lured bimsnll llio milhor of ihe rhnrge and hn imnis- diatelv proceeded to imivo every ebrii ire lie had maile lie pulltheil a -laiemem, signed oy ,ir. r arr, suoinu. tinting every word ho bud snid, and alu two leiters from other members ol the Leirislattire, with whm Clingmnn hail simiUr converiaiii ns, nnd to whom he made similar promises. ...v r..n...n. bei Biven. M,nv i.irmi.,. rn .,., DO ciua irom i.i.r SOU, I.... .1,.. mn.t nr,.l..,ld U. th-ii hi. ..I.rliv l.nvlnr. The constitutional Wj of the law, which gave freedom reached a sullh h ut height to secure Ihe Empire with- lo Mr- iv". J is wil1 h teMwl in ,ho ...., seriousonnosition.il is not deemed iudirin... Supreme Court. To mo there Mums noihmg in it which Whw ( it thnt the "Union" thus Irnmples under foot 'he recent election, i uu is umpieSi onamy ami nn- Ii-.r 1... j;..!n rt;H-nti.ml.lnrv7 I'Timiaieiy irou. m uniui o j ... pmuu'iii uj u..v..e...Mft h j . Yltj. lliriy alidnld Im disbanded, as many persons is ii not aouufc nmn linn mo ikkii.ii .-' linvo supposed it wouM no, in consrquenco ol the In- ihese bickerings 1 We devoutly hoped that Ihe sub- umphiint election nf Krruiklin I'ierro, We do not coin HOUSE OF RRI'RBSENTATIVES. 10 o'clock, A. M. Prayer by Rev. Mr. Brunor. Yiionr M r. Houk. Of 0. B. Compton, respecting ! gas lifthts in Dayton. Mr. Some, of B. S'oror nnd others, for the admit tnneool'O. H. VosN-r to ihe bar. Bill Introduced. Sy Mr. Ward of Warren. To ro- pe;il an act tn regulate appeals lo Ihe district courts. eportoi mantling t.ominutee.Mr. noun, irom ine .lodicinry cotnmittoo, reported back the bill to provi.lo lor the nrfiinHil')ii of ihe LegiHlntiire, with ntneml- nieiits. Referred to enmmiltee ol tho whole. Committee of the Whole, Tho House then went into commit!, o of tho Whole, Mr. Houk iu tho chair, and considered tho bill to provide Iir the organization ol the Legislature, and after somo timo spent therein, mostly on the question whether tho House, when it lint meets, sliull Do railed to order uy a memuor or uy one of the executivo or judicial oflicers, the cotniniticn rose and obtained leave to sit ngain. The ttouiothen ainnurned. 3 o'clock, P. M. Tho hill to annoint Receivers incase of attachment. wns received bum tho Senate, correctly oneroised, and boiiiEr read once, a motion wns made to dm peine with the rules in order tn read il agntu ; and oinecuon oetng made, the yoas nnd nays were taken, and resulted yens 62, nays 15. I hoNneaKer decided thomolion to dispense, iosi, ns tho constitution requires a vote of " iliree-fourths of he House," to dispense with ihis rule. Mr. Houk appealed from iho decision of theSpenkor, on thn plea tlut tho " House" referred to inthecoinit luiion did not include all the members elected, but nlv those present at the lime. Mr.Wnrd.nl Warren, seconded the anneni. and uu- vocnted the sumo m-nning of ihe coumitution a Mr. Hi. ilk. Mr. LeBlond. Mr. Gest, and Mr. HiiKhe supported decision nf the boenker, on the ground that Homo " in the idirase unih-r cotisiderolion, included ull the meniber elected to the House. Mr. O'Ncil and .Mr. Shollabarger supported tho mo-u to apjiotd. Tli" question waslhen taken, nnd resulttd yen 42 nnys nr. No tuo decision ol the Npenkor wns snstnuiefi. Tho House then adjourned. back the bill relating to the sale of railroad bonds, with amendmeutsiirikingnutthe old bill and inserting a new one. Lnid on ihe table to be printed. Mr. Smith, of Stark, offered a resolution calling for the names of persons who had contracted for the print-inp, stitching and told ing of bills, under the law of last winter. Mr. LeBlond moved the referenco of the resolution to the committee on Printing. Lost. The resolution being on its passnge. Mr. Gest snid the contractor lived at Cleveland, and required the bills tn be sent lo him at the expense of the Stale. The Hnuse did nnt sn understand it. Committee of the Whole. The Hnuse then went into committee of tho Whole, on the bill providing for the organization of the House, and alter some time rose and reported it to the House with amendments, and the bill and pending amendments wero lnid on the (able to be printed. the House then adjourned. Wednesday, November 34, 159. IN SENATE. 10 o'clock, a. m. Prayer was offered by the Rev. Mr. Smith. Mr. Wilson, Irom Ihe committee on Finance, reported hack the bill to make appropriations iu part for the yenrs 1852 and 18.7.1, with curtnin amendments, which were agreed to, and the bill was read the third time and paused. Mr. Vnttier reported back the bill to establish a Bu reau of Statistics in the oHico of the Secretory nf State, wjihoiit amendment, and the bill was made ihe special order nf the dny for this dny. Mr. Midge, trnm a select commilleo, reponen uaca the bill to n mend thn act ustRblishitig hoards of County Commissioners, with an amendment tu strike out the whole bill and insert a new one. The amendment wns laid upon tho table nnd ordered to be printed. On motion of Mr. G'illett, the resolution nf Mr. Mun-gen relative to Ihe pressing and folding of Senate bills, wns taken from iho tahle. The original resolution wns stricken nnt, and on motion of Mr. (iilleit the following inserted : Retolved, Tlmt the standing committee on Printing ho find is hereby instructed In inquire into and report to the Senate at tho entliest rnuveotetit day, the cause t the demy in drying, presume, stitching and folding the bill ordered in ba printed, with the appropriate remedy, nnd thnt in the meantime, and until otherwise directed by the Semite, Iho Clerk cause ihe nece.ssary drying, stitching nnd il.ling to lie executed at price not excoeding ihe lowest rejected bid. On motinn nf Mr. Rice, the Senate then went into committee of iho whole on the bill for the re orgnniza-lion, supervision and maiuteiinuco of common schools, Mr. Cradlebnugh in the chair, nnd without coming to liny conehifii ui tho commilleo roso. The Prehident laid heforo llio .Senate a communication from tho Clerk in reply lo the resolution of Mr. Gdleit. adopted this morning, thnt he had contracted with Captain Lilley for tho performance of llio work iherein named. The Senate tlu-n took a recess. 3 o'clock, p. m. Mr. Tod moved ihe adoption ol a resolution, admitting M. H. Allan! t within the bar nf the Senate, as Reporter for iho Capital City Facts which was agreed lo. A ca'l nf the Senate was ordered ; and 16 Senators answered to their names, The Sergeant-at-Arms was despatched afier the ab sentees. A motion of Mr. Hibben, to go into committee of llio wlmlo, was lost. Mr. Mack oflerrd the following resolution: " Retolved. That the Finance committee of the Sen ate be instructed lo introduce a bill, having for its ob ject, ihe repeal of the two hundred dollnr exemption in toe present tax law. Also making it mo amy ui me Assessor to nppratso all property that thoy are requir ed to list for taxation." The resolution wns referred to the committee on Finance. The Senate then resolved itself into committee or the Whole, on ihe bill forthe better regulation of Common Schools Mr. Cradlclmiifih in iho clmir ; and after some time spent on the consideration thereof, the committee rose and reported progress. To-morrow iieiug the dny set apart lor public inanas-giving and prayer in the 8iate of Ohio, On motion of .Mr. W ilson, the Senate adjourned until Fridny morning at JO o'clock. to pul his lile any furiher at iho jeopardy nf the chan and that wo should heftr no moro of prebend bow any pnrty defeat can operate as an ex-.u... ;.. eral government. And it will certainly create much H w ...i. .ni,.r. tinciiisliment of pnriv liriiirioles. If we have over it for many years. Wo deprecate these seriiioiinl qnnr- eral government. And it will certainly surprise ll mo uiounai wi.n wm m ,. decision win . we , Uw of 0)O cminl wil mikt, common came in frowning down such sectional agita ling prints as Iho H'iiinfoa Uniim. Thr Tax Law UNivi:n.TY Lands. Our shot ol an assnssiu. The President ha commenced the formation of an " Imperial Guard," similar lo the celebrated Imperial Guard of Ihe Emperor. It is lo be composed nf fifteen hundred picked men, selected from the standing army of France. The qualifications will be site, personal appearance, nte, bravery, physical and mentnl ability. They will all be mounted on blooded horses, and caparisoned hi a style befitting Iho body guard nf the Emperor of a great nation. Their duty will he In guard bis prrsoh at all limes, in his palace, on parade days, and on (ho field of battle. Two nf tho oflicers of the Guard are already spoken nf: Napoleon B.itia- parte, son of ihe ex King Jem mo Bonaparte, and young Mural, son of (he Prince Moral, who lately dii-tinnuished hiumelf in ihe war acniust thn Knbvles in Africa. to Ohio, and by ihe underground Railroad, tn C a inula, urer lo prevent htm Irotn taking steps lo coiieci mesn Thn mnlter of the succession is said lo bo pnsitively So serious Is becoming the evil, thai the slaveholders taxes. It will be made perpetual, nnd tho Stnte win settled. In tho event of a foiluro of a direct male huve formed a Society for their assislance nnd protec- be compelled to lool the bill. Bo much lor wise legis lame from Louis Nupoleon, tho siiccesnion of the ex. I tion. The fallowing ate Ihe main features of tho plan: lation. King Jemmo. and alier him. of In son, Napoleon Ho. To Dave a pursuing committee, w act on mo msiruc- RrKATmMAT . Thn cWon for Sen. rest, shull declare the reverse of this In be Iho fact. We haVe had dull weather here for the last two or three days. The Cretetni City is shortly expected from I lavana. We have hud several telegraphic despatches, . .. . . 1. n i .... 1 in rrtcrenr. lo inn cnursa wniru u.o u,...n .illlmrllic. wU, tmmt w, ,, l,0fr intend io pursue, wnu uiv ci, uu nun mp, uui uiey are too contradictory in their nature, lo merit confi dence. We will know, however, soon, by the steam er's own report, how matters now stand between itself ami ihe captain-general of the island Yours truly, W. tinguishnient or parly pm-riples. H we have over hnd principles nod who enn dotibt tlu pure conservatism of (hose wo have advocated why should a single unit of our true pnriy strength consent lo mtrge itself into the OemocraeyT We lmvo no nnlinrtcn with such doctrines of willinc nhsorpiiun. Men mny ho beaten in bnitloi but thnt is no re I son why they slinuld enlist under tho bnnner of tho enemy. If tho wnr emitinm, nnd su;-h persons, instead orremiunit.g prisoners, are found with arms in law of last spring was under consideration, we d cussed Ihe propriety of taxing the Innds, the rani m ,,1(,ir lftM,iti WB nro inclined to think Ihey would very ,)ilh ! r.it tlm lintixlit ill l ie w n university m i ml v lin nnti ei io uio mnmi i irnnnra. . i... i- v.- v.....r. liiil-il If mor there was n lime when iho lovnl con- AtnehS. ll was uenninsirnieii j i"" ...i...r.r-, . i i 1 .i I.I.. u,l.lol.- ..ol.ll.hcl from sanrnt.vrs ,.f this conntry sh.mU ..nn.l lirm, In Ihoir ... .o,.,, ......... - - I nll.-R.nnrv to such line il.'Ctrlni'. a. luivo l.cfnox-m. his rn, thnt .nchtnxnti,.n wns clcntly.mjtist mm llio- ir, ,n , ,i,.iiii.lrnlinii i. l-roshlonl Fill "nl. But tho l.w pssit',1 ln.no..l nils, nn.i ino ins more, it is ll.,. hrrscnt. Iniornniinnnl q.icslu.n. nro wr. as.H.scd. Tho lessens lmvo npiipnli-it to u.o uni.ris, nl.oi.t nr... nil wi.irn wtu roiniro 1.10 suvuiy aim pr.i- ... . .. t...-i .i:i.. I .... .i... v... i .M...O..I .onio.i iho Tro.s. . cut ninnxLoinont nf iliBrrooi mon in all i.artics. A 1110 staves in ccmocKy .in u,ii , cu,,,, ,B . "'J-'-' "" r. . " . ".!. 11...V1.... wild ami I,, si.irit ..I .sorossion, rifo nm'.,B cnrlnin etn4fles. must be lield in ilierk. And with a view to tlm nininieiimice of otir ritditful intbiencn in surli a crisis, our organization should bo preserved with Iln uims!'""'0 nnd alacrity. 4 or Rj.nator Oovkt. For two or Ihree day Mr. Bkachman, the Whig member of tho House from Huniilton county, isounnf the umst sub-siantial, best looking men in the Hull. He Is a business mnn, and wo shall be much mistaken if he does not provo tn be one of tho most valuable members from the commercial emporium. Our Whig friends wen lucky in ihoir rhoice, and that 1600 mnjority Is strong evidence thnt Iho people were of the samo opinion. The Japan Expedition will leave about the first of December next. It is composed of tho following ships: Vetult. ( Vermont, 30(10 tons Missiaflippt, atenm frigate, 1700 Ions Susquehanna, do S.'iOO do IMneetoii, do 1200 do Allegheny, dn 1100 do Saratoga, sloop-of-wur, first class St. Mary a, do no Vtncennea, do do Razee frigate Mncodoman Brig-of-war Porpoise ,ri in. guns do do Tiiedy, November 3, 1859. IN SENATE. 10 o'clock, a. in. Pnwer bv Rev. Mr. Smith. Tho UUt mnking appropriations In pirt for Iho yeais 18r,'4 and IB"., wns read the second time and rccom mitted to tho standinii commilleo on Finance. The President laid beloro tho Senate the report m the Secretnry of Stale in reply to the resolution ol the sonaio in relation to the contractors tor ine ptinnc priming. 1 lie report wns laid upon uio tamo ami oruereu in be printed. Mr. Uillett ottered a resolution requiring inesnr-geant-at-arms to discharge two of the messenger hoys now employed. Mr. Wnlkup moved to lay the resolution on Hie table. The yens ami niv wero demanded, and resulted yens 12, nays 1.1. All the Whip voted nny. On motion nl nir. rmcR, uio resolution was ineu referred to ihe committee on Retrenchment. On motion nf Mr. Riddle, Mr. Peppnrd was elected to fill the vacancy In ihe Judiciary Committee occa sinned uylhedenlhol Mr. Uovey. On motion of Mr. Rice, the Senate Ihen went into committee of the Whole, and resumed the consideration of ihe bill for the heller regulation nl common schools, Mr. Cradlebnugh in ihe clrur. The commilleo soetit the forenoon in discussing ihe proper me'lvwl nnd extent of negro education whether negro rhiliiren simuui no permuted in nnrnn in cmn-mon the snrne school wilh tho whites whether they should have common school privileges at all whether, they should be taxed furscli Hil purposes nnd wholher they should linvo seimois c rem en exciupivny mr uieiie selves Messrs. Sherman, Pardee, Finrk, Rice, Cnshing, Pmmiird and Wilson, participated iu the discussion. Without com in it to nny conclusion, the committee at length arose, reported progress, and asked lenyo to sit again. The Senate then took a recess. 3 o'clock, p. Tho President lnid before Iho Senate a communica tion from ihe Statu Librannti. in answer to the resold tion of Mr. Peppnrd, in relation lo the volume ol Laws passed since IHId. i nn Commuincnimn wu. mm on inn mmn, On motion of Mr. Wn'kiip, the Senate then wentiatn Committee of ihe Whole, and resumed the considera tion of the hill for Uio re-nrgnnizatinn, supervision and mnintenntice of Common 8c lion is, Air. (Jradlebnugh In the Clmir. After sometime spent Iherein, the committee rose and reported progress, without having come lu any conclusion. House amendments to the hill tn authorize courts nl Common Pleas to appoint receiver in coses of attachment, were read, and On mnti..n of Mr. Finck, committed to the Commit-trooti Iho Judiciary. (In motion of Mr. Rira, ihe Rennte acain resolved ittelf into Committee of ilia Wholo nn ihe special or der of the dny the co"mnn schmd bill and before coming lo a resolution i hereon the committee rose. Mr. Mnngen (in earnest) nhVed tlm followingresolution: Reiolrtd, That tho Clerk of the Bena'o bo and he is hereby authorized to have the stllrhiog and pressing ot the Senate hill which nro now printed, rieruted for the time being, until the committee nn Printing nh nil reMrt pursuuiii tn thn resolution in their uauiis, callinir on Ihem lor information on the iiiitject id stum-in it and pressing. On motion ol Mr. Kiddle, tho resolution wns mid on the tnhle. The Senate then adjourned. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. 10 o'clock, a m. Prnynrby Rev. Mr. Brmu-r. Petitiont . Mr. Hnrniim presented the memorial of C. W. Gray, nf Cleveland, respecting ihe pressing, stitching and folding of bills, awarded to him under the contract for State printing, nib' ring to release the same to theStntn, Referred in ihe Printing committee. Report t of teltct committees. Nr. Montgomery reported hack the bill regulating the fees of County Treasurers for ihe collection of school inxes, with amendments ; and the bill wos referred to the Judiciary com mittee. Orders of the day. Tho bill for the appointment of receivers ttt cases of aiturhment, wns received from the Sennte, wilh amendment, which were agreed lo yen 71, nnys o. So me toil becomes a law. The rending ol the mtulia bill occupied mucn ot me nnrning session. Alter which, tne Mouse toon a recess. .1 o'clock, P. M. Mr. Houk, from tho Judiciary Committee, reported buck iho bill amending the act providing for the compensation of llio owners of privnto properly taken for the use of corporations, without amendment, and recommended its pnMaie. After some discusninn, the hilt was committed tn the rmnmiltee ol the Whole. Committee of the Whvte Tito House ihen went into Committee of iio Whole and considered Ihe nbove hill, and rose and obtained leave in sit ngnio. the House then nrij-airned ull rriuny. HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION. RUNAWAY SLAVES. Storeship Souihamptnn, Ho Lexington Do Talbot Tulal number of men., impir.e, is rrcegnued. 1 he I resnlent, however, re- lion o 1 .a -reamem, to nave .census , ... o n n (tj ,ict( , ,Ul . -V ;; " fi Mt t(l htlWl Wl, serves tn l.imsell the right or auoplion, winch was owneil ly the memners! w nave a permanent inna i . , . f ir r,lv, Y. ridi.le( h.,n. enteriained lhat in tb. course of possesseil by the Kmper.ir Napoleon. This arrange-1 pay eipenses of pursuit , tn pay a stipulated reward ' in I,,, I...I.1 mi tho a month or six weeks he would bo able to tnko bis neat ment.lt will be at once perceived, ns fnr as reciuds I to llmso who capture; to allnw pursuit of no slave, ' ... ,. . . .... in tho Sennte, Ho wns hroucht home nn Monday evo Jenime BotiaPnrie, is only tn provide ncainst lite con- by ibetr committee, not owned by a membej tn pay 11,11 Uefmoer n V ' K niPi nilli Tuesday morning his leg, which had liecnme tlngenry of a sudden death, within perhaps a year or $J00 to a cilinen ol any tree Stale whit captures a m- - resn. . . . B .. . 1 J I ... . r it i urn. ... r... 1 . i- n I In ihe evenlna acute itillmimntton of the lnngsmnni two. Ho will no doom marry me frincesa u.mnine gitive, it over in year. ... ngei n um.fr, v . , , LoptHANA. 1 lie omcmi majority lor 1'iBurE fpi(lW(, . f , ,.(-(int injliry tn tie Hm,-was of Wasa, tn a few months, (who, It may bo monthmed, I iuformalion prnduclivo of a caplore, f iO. 1 iieso.wun nB Louinj t reported at 1.4S4. xlQ Cll)ie ni Dlt d-mh. His lungs have for some lime pwant. In anticipation of this event, last Bundsy I the recommendation of the adoption of Ihe special pa-1 I beea W(1,l( Bl,j it rKposuro after the accident, before renounced the Protestant faith, and was received with I trol law, on the border counties, constitute ihetr plan liORTR CAROLINA. I no omcttu liiujuruy iui he could he got nil irom tue wrecK. produced ine ai- rMt nornn Ink. th. Ctholie ehureh .1 Mnnveti. In V nf actlnn. " ' PllRCl inHorto Oawltna to (itW. twit which baa resultett in ueain. Marmt iar. , 3,04ij t tt. -I.,.- is.t-si nf thn shins' companh's nre to bo ml. led 700 mnrines, which. Willi the rompiemeni m m. stnresbips, ollicers. scientilie corp-, and dher attaehe.l in il.. n.n.himii uiill mnkn nn elfo livo force of 1lHK men and above RR0 guns, mostly henvy ordnance. Tho sirnmer are each to monnl a couple ol Patximn shell gun of the largest cntibre, and placed on revolving trucks, so as lo sweep ihe horinoti. Three con are intended to be used for the discharge nl shells of BH and 1211 lbs. each, and hmg ', making 1 gun to ench stenmor. r . , M..,h .t.;n i. nr..vt,l..d wilh two brass "4 lb. field pieces, to be used for shHs or canister shot. Philadelphia Ledger. Wo lmve rcceivptl ft copy of Oon, Carkyb i.. n,n nn,,.,!- nf Ohio in bohnHof a law to pre i...i il,n li.ui.ir t r. din nf the Stnte. nnd a defence of the leading features ohhe Maine liquor law. It is written with vigor and ability, and will do much to sustain 1hl 1 cause among the people. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. 10 o'clock, a. Prayor by Hey. Mr. Bruner. The bill In authorize courla of Common Pleas to ap point Receivers in cases nf attachment, being rend iho second time. The House then agreed lo suspend the rules; yets 78. nays v The hill Wns ibi-n rend third time. Mr. Wsrd, of Warren, moved the bill and amend meids be rnmrniited tn thn Jmliriitrv Onintil'ee, Mr. Houk opposed tho motion to cnmmit.and Mr. rVN..i.ltl,i,nnrf..,l Ik After snnie further discussion between Messrs. I Link and fTN.. ill- Mr. Plumb moved In have the bill printed, as ho could not vote underslandnigly on Ihe subject. i The motion lo print wa lost The bill anil amendmenis were then committed lo the .Indicnry Cnmmiltee. Mr. Dickey, Ropresenintive elect irom miner county, in the pliien of Mr Weller, resigned, appeared, wns qualified and look bis seat. The Ibmse Ihen imk n recess. o'clock, e. m. n.;;. WrvWi'. P.v Mr. Rekert. T.i remiUto the in i. .In nl' ihn deliver- of frt it'ht bv steamtmnls and oilier water crnli, and Ihn receiving ittereoi ny inn consignwo or owner- By Mr. Poland. To repeal an at l to serure tne enriy publication nf the Inw. Ity Mr. MetHnnnlinn, in mnpim nut mr nix in- cnrpornlinn of cities nnd inrnrpornted villages. Report of Standing Commthet yu. Wills, irom Hie Mmmiiioi. en Hnnds and IHjhwavs, yepnrtrd a bill tilling ihe mode id Inying out and Mtaiilishitig riair Mr. limik. from he Jiulic srv Unmmitiee, repnrien back the bill anthnriiing the appointment of receivei in cases of attachment, wilh amendmenis. wnirn were Tho following extrarts exhibit the vnrious nullifica tions of the Exemption Bill now in force iu ihe several States named : Maine. A lot of land, dwelling bouse and out build ings ibereon as shall not exce d five hundred dollars in value. Vermont, Tho homes tend of every bouse keeper, or a head of a family, lo the value ol live hundred dollars. Massachusetts. The (nt nnd buildings thereon occupied as a residence, In the value of live hundred dollars.New York Tho lot ar.d buildings 1 hereon occu pied as a residence, lo the value of one thousand dol lars. Maryland All real pstnle acquired by marriace, lurid b iho life of the wife, from execution of debt from bushand Georgia Twenty acres of Innd, including dwelling house nnd improvements, nut tu exceed two hundred dollars and ihe additionnl nmmmt of five, neres for each child umh r tiHecn years of nge. Honda. rorty ncros ol land in every farmer, and to every house keeper residing in a town w city, a house and lot not In exceed three hundred dollars in value. Alabama. Forty acres uf land when not In any town nr city, provided mien does not exceed in value four hundred dollars. Terns. -Two hundred acres of land, when not in any town nr city )n't, not In exceed in value two thou-sand dullnrs. Ohio. Every fnmily a homestead nnt exceeding five hundred dollars in value. Miehiiian. Forty neres, with dwelling house and nppnrteiirinees, when not hi town or city ; il in town nr city, a lot and dwelling house not to exceed in vnlue til'ieen hundred dnlhits. Illinois. Lot nf ground nnd buildings occupied thereon as a residence, not exceedine iu value one thnuaiul dollars. Iowa. rorty neres of land, not in town or city, or house and lot inn lowu or city, not exceeding five 'liiniired uoiiar. Witenllnin. Forty neres rf Innd. not in town nr citv. or a town and city I,,, nut exceeding one-fourth of an acre. California. The hnmestend consisiing of a quantity if land, toifeiher with the dwelling house thereon, and ils nppurteiinnces, and not exceeding iu value the sum of live thousand dollars. New Jersey. A homestead tn ench head of a family, being ihe family residence, to the value of five hundred dollars, lint tn bo neta in the hnnds of Iho administrator but to remain for iho benefit of the widow, and until the maturity of Ihe lust minor child. South Cnrnlitm A homestead of fifty acres of Innd, including llio dwelling house nnd appurtenances, not to extend In any property siiunlo within ihe limits of any cily orlown corporate. Thr LocnMoTiTR People who mny aoe a loromr- tive lentins up and down tho Innd at the rnie of forty miles an hour, making ihe earth tremble beneath its gisul trend, ami the heavens themselves reverberate with Us learlul clutter, senrmg nature with lis unearthly din, and tritditcning all creation nlniost from it pro priety people who only see it in lis terrible aciiviiy, lmve no idea what eminent social virtues it is rtidowrd with, This i its public chnrncler. Its private one is mio'lier aOtir, Now and Ihen, one of Iheso huge monsters, in whne imn bowel slumbers more than a thousand ginnt's power, comes up and stands under nur window, nmlstimko. awny n gently a Ihe most exem plary cooking stove t lis luiyo sientn pipes sing a strain us "ft nnd iluhet nthe most aminbte tcn-ketlle, and its Itnir.s nf steel breathing as nweeily ns an mlant in its slumbers. But the demon of power is there. Let nny mm hut pim h Im ears, and no venernble spinster cut will spit more fiercely ( let him gripe those Iron h ntnU, and Ihe pipes winch were 1 lined to so sou a train, send forth a yell ns if heaven and earth were mining tonelher; nnd those lungs which first hreaihed so quietly, cough like a volcnno ( and olV it Rites, darkening the h 'nvetis with Its volume nf smoke. Household Word. The now Kinking law of Wisconsin has been agreed!, ami no on y " J . ' , , mei,mnttM iw the neonla bv a msiorily of from twenty . bm-X;. tTp r- liVS. ' I-.-Hyjv. ujjd. jri,,.. o.. d w Mr. OM (tm th Judioi.ry oommittw, mportml cofoco h.rd rr.or.ojr homhuj. I - r - - ' '